On Fri, 2020-04-10 at 17:51 +0300, Reco wrote: > Hi. > > On Fri, Apr 10, 2020 at 08:24:41AM -0500, Anil Felipe Duggirala > wrote: > > On Thu, Apr 9, 2020, at 11:16 AM, John Hasler wrote: > > > It's just looking up your IP. The method isn't reliable (it > > > usually > > > puts me on the other side of the state) but it works more often > > > than > > > not. > > > > I don't believe this is the case. > > The software behaviour does not depend on one's beliefs. > > $ apt show gnome-maps | grep Dep > Depends: ... libgeocode-glib0 (>= 3.16.2) ... > > $ apt-show libgeocode-glib0 | grep ^Desc > Description: geocoding and reverse geocoding GLib library using > Nominatim > > And the source of geocode-glib shows the actual server they're using: > > GeocodeNominatim * > geocode_nominatim_get_gnome (void) > { > GeocodeNominatim *backend; > > G_LOCK (backend_nominatim_gnome_lock); > backend = g_weak_ref_get (&backend_nominatim_gnome); > if (backend == NULL) { > backend = geocode_nominatim_new ("https://nominatim.gnome.org > ", > "zeesha...@gnome.org"); > g_weak_ref_set (&backend_nominatim_gnome, backend); > } > G_UNLOCK (backend_nominatim_gnome_lock); > > return backend; > } Could you tell me if this code, by connecting to this service is getting my location simply by using my IP address?
> > Is there any way I could check to see exactly where Gnome Maps is > > getting the location from? > > Being the GNOME software? The source is the only way to get sure. > I'd check tcp:443 connections to 8.43.85.23. > There is a connection to that IP address and it starts when I open Gnome Maps (I think it connects to a different port though, Im a newbie though)