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When there’s a natural disaster, an accident or some other
emergency, getting in touch with people that could be affected may be a lot
easier said than done but Google’s latest App has definitely come to fix that.
Google's latest app, called Trusted Contacts is an app that
allows friends and family members to remotely share their location with just
one touch.
HOW IT WORKS
When you sign up on the app, you designate specific people
in your address book as "trusted contacts." This allows you to share
your location at any given time and allows them to request your location.
Unlike Apple's Find My Friends and some related apps,
Trusted Contacts doesn't share your location by default. Instead, your trusted
contacts can see general information about your whereabouts, like whether
you're currently online and if you've been moving around.
You can, however, broadcast your location at any given
moment to one or all of your trusted contacts, who will be able to see your
real-time location until you end the location sharing. The thinking, says
product manager David Tattersall, is that users will be able to share their
location with loved ones for brief periods of time, like while walking home or
out on a hike.
The app also works offline, so if your battery dies or you
lose service, the app will still be able to point contacts to wherever your last
known location was.
Likewise, if a trusted contact wants to check on you, they
can ask for your location within the app.
When a contact requests your
location, the app will notify you and you can opt to share your location or
decline the request. If you don't respond to the request, the app will
automatically share your most recent location with the contact who requested.
That last part may be troubling to the more privacy conscious,
but Google says it's necessary as people are not always able to use their phone
during serious emergencies, like natural disasters or car accidents.
"It basically means then that as long as you've got
your phone in your pocket, someone can always find you in case of an emergency.
You're always findable," Tattersall tells an online source.
Trusted Contacts is currently only available on Android, but
there is a web interface that allows you to designate iPhone users and others
who don't have the app as trusted contacts and Google says an iPhone version is
on its way.
Though the app is relatively simple for now, Tattersall
notes that the app complements some of Google's other crisis response services
and says that, in the future, Google may choose to integrate it with Android's
built-in emergency calling features.
"We have a really robust crisis response offering for
times of earthquakes and natural disasters... you can see there's a natural
evolution here where these two products could work together if we want."
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