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Groups > comp.mobile.android > #143823 > unrolled thread
| Started by | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| First post | 2024-10-26 05:47 +0000 |
| Last post | 2024-10-29 16:46 +0100 |
| Articles | 20 on this page of 29 — 5 participants |
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Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-26 05:47 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-26 09:35 +0100
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-26 14:28 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> - 2024-10-26 10:27 -0500
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-26 21:28 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> - 2024-10-26 21:06 -0500
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-27 04:22 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-27 09:25 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-27 13:16 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-27 15:23 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-27 15:33 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> - 2024-10-27 12:02 -0700
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-27 20:19 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-27 21:45 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-28 09:11 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-28 15:00 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-28 15:45 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-29 01:44 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-27 22:34 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> - 2024-10-28 09:08 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-30 14:43 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> - 2024-10-27 11:10 -0500
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-29 02:39 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> - 2024-10-29 10:17 -0700
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> - 2024-10-30 11:39 +0100
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Andrews <andrews@spam.net> - 2024-10-30 13:55 +0000
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> - 2024-10-31 20:36 +0100
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> - 2024-10-30 11:06 -0700
Re: Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) Arno Welzel <usenet@arnowelzel.de> - 2024-10-29 16:46 +0100
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 05:47 +0000 |
| Subject | Was Google Location Accuracy (now is How to Spoof Wi-Fi Location) |
| Message-ID | <vfhvpo$18uv$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
How do you spoof Wi-Fi location on Android? I probably know this stuff better'n anyone here, but maybe (hopefully) someone who reads this question knows it better than I do as I do NOT know how to spoof Wi-Fi location when Google Location Accuracy is turned on. Whenever I turn on Google Location Accuracy (e.g., when an app requires it to run), I immediately first spoof my GPS location (if I'm not routing). That confuses the hell out of the app because it thinks you're in one GPS location while the nearby Wi-Fi unique BSSIDs tell them you're elsewhere. That works fine when I'm at home because I live in the boonies and my unique BSSID's are NOT in the Google database - but when I'm traveling, then the unique BSSID's of all the Access Points around me tell the truth. Given that situation that it's trivial to spoof GPS when Precise Location Accuracy is turned on, does anyone know how to spoof Wi-Fi location data?
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 09:35 +0100 |
| Message-ID | <lo3nu1Fp8ugU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143823 |
Andrews wrote: > I do NOT know > how to spoof Wi-Fi location when Google Location Accuracy is turned on. Is there a global Location Accuracy toggle hidden somewhere? I only see per-app toggles.
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 14:28 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfiub0$2r59$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143826 |
Andy Burns wrote on Sat, 26 Oct 2024 09:35:09 +0100 : >> I do NOT know >> how to spoof Wi-Fi location when Google Location Accuracy is turned on. > > Is there a global Location Accuracy toggle hidden somewhere? > I only see per-app toggles. Hi Andy, If it wasn't you, I'd answer that question by saying I have discussed on this newsgroup how to create a single-tap shortcut to the "global" 'Google Location Accuracy" toggle - but I must assume you know about that toggle. <https://i.postimg.cc/mrCz84fW/googlelocationaccuracy.jpg> So instead, I ask you if you can rephrase that question as my original answer would be that, at least on my Android 13 Samsung, it's obvious. Settings > Locations > Location services > Google Location Accuracy <https://i.postimg.cc/BvxqycSX/googlelocationaccuracysettings.jpg> Since I'm always trying to be helpful, did I misunderstand your question? And, do you have any idea how to spoof nearby Wi-Fi access point data?
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| From | VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 10:27 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <1gynl5ogj1mk6.dlg@v.nguard.lh> |
| In reply to | #143823 |
Andrews <andrews@spam.net> wrote:
> How do you spoof Wi-Fi location on Android?
>
> I probably know this stuff better'n anyone here, but maybe (hopefully)
> someone who reads this question knows it better than I do as I do NOT know
> how to spoof Wi-Fi location when Google Location Accuracy is turned on.
>
> Whenever I turn on Google Location Accuracy (e.g., when an app requires it
> to run), I immediately first spoof my GPS location (if I'm not routing).
>
> That confuses the hell out of the app because it thinks you're in one GPS
> location while the nearby Wi-Fi unique BSSIDs tell them you're elsewhere.
>
> That works fine when I'm at home because I live in the boonies and my
> unique BSSID's are NOT in the Google database - but when I'm traveling,
> then the unique BSSID's of all the Access Points around me tell the truth.
>
> Given that situation that it's trivial to spoof GPS when Precise Location
> Accuracy is turned on, does anyone know how to spoof Wi-Fi location data?
I'm confused. If you don't want to include more than GPS for
geolocation, why enable high accuracy mode which includes wi-fi hotspots
and cell towers?
High accuracy: GPS + networks
Battery saving: networks only
Device sensors only: GPS only <-- This isn't what you want, so you can
spoof it?
Those are my settings. In your reply to Andy, seems you don't get to
choose other than On and Off for geo accuracy. Turning off seems to be
the same as "device sensors only" for me which only using GPS. However,
one the last screenshot but one, looks like you have wi-fi scanning off.
With wi-fi scanning off, does it get forced on if you enable high
accuracy mode?
Are you trying to using GPS + cell towers while omitting wi-fi hotspots?
Not sure Android has that option, but I haven't use lots of brands of
smartphones to be sure.
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 21:28 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfjmu0$2kk1$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143849 |
VanguardLH wrote on Sat, 26 Oct 2024 10:27:14 -0500 :
>> Given that situation that it's trivial to spoof GPS when Precise Location
>> Accuracy is turned on, does anyone know how to spoof Wi-Fi location data?
>
> I'm confused.
Hi Vanguard,
Thanks for trying to help out as this is a VERY DIFFICULT privacy problem
to resolve - that will require help from people like you and Andy Burns.
The problem is also asked by me here in the XDA Developer's web site today.
<https://xdaforums.com/t/privacy-is-it-possible-to-spoof-the-nearby-wi-fi-access-point-location-data-when-google-location-privacy-is-turned-on-we-can-already-spoof-gps.4699702/>
> If you don't want to include more than GPS for geolocation, why enable
> high accuracy mode which includes wi-fi hotspots and cell towers?
Exactly! We all agree with you. We do NOT want it. We hate it!
But Google wants it - which is the reason Andy Burns opened this thread.
Andy is warning us that Google sets it by default on Android 15!
> High accuracy: GPS + networks
> Battery saving: networks only
> Device sensors only: GPS only <-- This isn't what you want, so you can
> spoof it?
Remember, it's not us who is enabling this setting; it's Google doing it!
"Google Location Accuracy" > "Improve Location Accuracy"
We don't want it. Even more to the point, we do not need it.
It's a trick by Google to get our data; it helps Google - not us!
I've discussed it in this thread from the summer when Google turned it on.
[Privacy] Do you know a way to permanently disable Google Location Accuracy
'precise location' & 'Wi-Fi scanning' while keeping only the GPS radio on?
<https://xdaforums.com/t/privacy-do-you-know-a-way-to-permanently-disable-google-location-accuracy-precise-location-wi-fi-scanning-while-keeping-only-the-gps-radio-on.4543135/>
> Those are my settings.
What I want is for me and me only to turn on "Google Location Accuracy
Improve Location Accuracy"; only me. Not Google. Nobody but me.
And I'll NEVER turn it on!
That's teh whole point.
We don't want it on.
Ever.
It's *never* needed (in my outdoor use model, anyway).
[I could see it being useful in rare indoor-only use models though.]
> In your reply to Andy, seems you don't get to choose other than
> On and Off for geo accuracy.
That's not the problem. Because I know how to turn it off.
(Although Andy implied he can't turn it off so we have to wait for him to
respond as in Android 13 I can turn it off when apps turn it on.)
The problem to understand is diabolically sinister.
1. Google LOVES when idiots turn on "Improve Location Accuracy"
2. But apparently there aren't enough idiots who do that
3. So now Google makes it the default in Android 15
Worse... since about the summer, Google Maps has *insisted* on turning it
on, and so do almost *all* apps which are compiling with the GSF spyware.
A. For example, if you open a cellular signal strength debugger
B. Which has been compiled with the ubiquitious GSF spyware runkit
C. It *forces* you to turn on "Improve Location Accuracy"!
D. Even though it's not needed at all for the cellular debugging!
The app doesn't need "Improve Location Accuracy".
Google needs it!
That's why we want to turn it off.
> Turning off seems to be
> the same as "device sensors only" for me which only using GPS. However,
> one the last screenshot but one, looks like you have wi-fi scanning off.
You *never* want "Wi-Fi Scanning" to be turned on.
The problem is the GSF spyware automatically turns it on!
So you're constantly turning it off.
Again, YOU never will need it.
Google wants it!
That's why we want to turn it off!
> With wi-fi scanning off, does it get forced on if you enable high
> accuracy mode?
The problem is diabolical, where each app does different things but the
apps that have GSF spyware incorporated into them will often automatically
turn on all the scanning that YOU don't need but that Google wants.
> Are you trying to using GPS + cell towers while omitting wi-fi hotspots?
> Not sure Android has that option, but I haven't use lots of brands of
> smartphones to be sure.
I do not want to use cell towers (too inaccurate compared to GPS).
I do not want to use Wi-Fi hotspots (because of spyware upload reasons)
I only want to use GPS (which is one way!).
GPS itself doesn't spy on you. It's a one-way signal.
From the satellite, to you.
GPS works even when you're not on the Internet.
But that's not the problem posed in this thread because it's trivial to
spoof the GPS location. I wrote all about it in this XDA thread long ago.
<https://xdaforums.com/t/privacy-whats-the-most-functional-mock-location-gps-spoofing-app-set-in-your-developer-options-for-mock-location-app.4475435/>
The problem is spoofing the Wi-FI AP location.
Only someone like Andy who knows how Android works will be able to
instantly understand why I ask this question though as most people haven't
thought past the letter A in the alphabet where this is around S or T in
terms of the level of knowledge and understanding that is required.
I am aware that the GPS spoofers also do "something" with respect to Wi-Fi
spoofing; but I asked XDA Developers about that a year ago, with no joy.
<https://xdaforums.com/t/privacy-what-does-it-mean-to-spoof-wi-fi-provider-in-your-default-fake-gps-mock-location-app-such-as-lexa-gps-spoofing.4629361/>
Long ago I asked this newsgroup what it means for Lexa to "Spoof Wi-Fi
Provider", but nobody knew what it means - and I don't know either.
<https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg>
In summary, Google is automatically turning on "Improve Location Accuracy"
because Google wants the nearby Wi-Fi access point unique location data.
We do NOT need "Improve Location Accuracy" nor do we want it.
So we turn it off.
But if we can't turn it off, what we want to do is spoof it.
This thread seeks people who know Android better than I do who can explain
to me (and to all of us) how to spoof all that nearby Wi-Fi location data?
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| From | VanguardLH <V@nguard.LH> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-26 21:06 -0500 |
| Message-ID | <upbfoijutktx.dlg@v.nguard.lh> |
| In reply to | #143859 |
Unless Google is changing the high accuracy setting to enabled (along with enabling wifi geolocation) when they update the OS version, I thought any apps that wanted to change geolocation for themselves would instigate a popup asking the user for permission. For me under an old Android 8.0.0, I go into Android settins -> General -> Apps & Notifications -> App permissions, where I find 32 of 41 apps want, and were granted, Your Location permission. In my old OS, I can only turn on or off the permission per app. I cannot configure which ones get which level of geolocation data (GPS only, networks only, or GPS & networks). However, I would surprised if Location Mode changed from Device sensors only (GPS only) to the other settings, or visa versa. But, as I stated, I'm on an old Android version, and there will never be a newer version for me. My old phone went unsupported back in 2019, and LG, the maker, left the smartphone market in 2021. I haven't heard of apps that change the geolocation mode, just those that want permission to use whatever is enabled. They might prod for high accuracy, and may not function properly without it, like a car locator app, but don't remember any that force a change in the mode. I've not been hit with malware that might try to do that. Yet, I can see how an OS upgrade could screw with settings. I have read where users of Windows and Android sometime claim a setting got changed away from what they configured, but if there was some evil plot to make that change then everyone would complain.
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 04:22 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfkf5p$2q94$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143864 |
VanguardLH wrote on Sat, 26 Oct 2024 21:06:57 -0500 : > Unless Google is changing the high accuracy setting to enabled (along > with enabling wifi geolocation) when they update the OS version, Hi Vanguard, I really appreciate that you're trying to help and for that you have to understand, but you're at the letter A or B in the alphabet where the question is at the level of the letter S or T in the alphabet in terms of knowledge required to answer the question. I could teach you what you need to know, but that's taking away from solving the question. I could write an entire book on what you don't know, in fact, so while I'll patiently answer your questions, you need to realize just doing so detracts from finding out the answer to the question. Fair enough? The problem with teaching you beginner basics is your questions are completely unrelated to the problem set so each of your questions actually subtracts (not add) from the process of finding out how to spoof the Wi-Fi access point database. > I > thought any apps that wanted to change geolocation for themselves would > instigate a popup asking the user for permission. What you need to know is it's not the app that is changing the permissions but the google spyware that the apps include, which is called GSF (Google Services Framework). It would take an entire book to explain that to you, so suffice to just say that any app that incorporates GSF (which is many apps!) will subliminally turn on stuff that you don't want turned on. Whether or not it "asks" you is in the eye of the beholder becuase they have a zillion ways of popping up stuff and NOT popping up stuff. Suffice to say if you did NOT want an app to turn on precise location accuracy, but you wanted ot use the app, the app has ways to turn it on anyway without you knowing it. Sure it pops up a question, but there are a zillion ways it poses that question. You have to realize how far behind you are in this quest to find the answer that I'd have to write an entire book to get you to the level Andy is at. For your purposes, just assume the app turns on the precise location accuracy without you knowing about it. Personally, a million times I've looked and lo and behold, "something" turned in on for me - and I KNOW all about it. It's that pernicious. Teaching you all of this doesn't help to answer the questions in this thread, which is how to spoof the Wi-Fi access point data. > For me under an old Android 8.0.0, I go into Android settins -> General > -> Apps & Notifications -> App permissions, where I find 32 of 41 apps > want, and were granted, Your Location permission. Please stop thinking that Google is being polite about this. They're not. They do it secretly. Without you knowing. It doesn't matter what you see at any given moment because if you run an app with GSF in it, it will CHANGE what you see. For your purpose, assume it's being done secretly as that's the easiest way I can explain it to you without writing an entire book explaining it. None of your beginner basics permissions questions help answer the questions in this thread, which is how to spoof the Wi-Fi access point data. > In my old OS, I can > only turn on or off the permission per app. I cannot configure which > ones get which level of geolocation data (GPS only, networks only, or > GPS & networks). However, I would surprised if Location Mode changed > from Device sensors only (GPS only) to the other settings, or visa > versa. But, as I stated, I'm on an old Android version, and there will > never be a newer version for me. My old phone went unsupported back in > 2019, and LG, the maker, left the smartphone market in 2021. Again, this has nothing to do with the problem set of how to spoof the Wi-Fi access point data. In my Android 13, I can certainly set which apps have permissions but the fact you're talking about permissions means you don't understand the problem set - which is fine - almost nobody understands it except maybe Andy Burns and me - but it's not about permissions. It's about Google secretly turning things on, so to speak, whether or not you "think" you have control over the permissions. And as such, since the precise location accuracy is gonna be turned on whether you like it or not, the question in this thread is how to spoof the Wi-Fi access point data. > I haven't heard of apps that change the geolocation mode, just those > that want permission to use whatever is enabled. They might prod for > high accuracy, and may not function properly without it, like a car > locator app, but don't remember any that force a change in the mode. > I've not been hit with malware that might try to do that. Yet, I can > see how an OS upgrade could screw with settings. I have read where > users of Windows and Android sometime claim a setting got changed away > from what they configured, but if there was some evil plot to make that > change then everyone would complain. The basic problem I have with writing a book for you to answer your basic beginner questions is you just don't have anywhere near the experience to understand the problem set so I will patiently try to explain the problem to you by providing an analogy, which, even as it's factually inaccurate, shows the point. I'll try my best to teach you - but this is super beginner stuff. Stuff everyone should know within a week of getting their first phone. But I'll try - as hard as I can - to write a short book to help you understand what the problem set is - at the risk of being blamed for not being nice by simply trying nicely to answer your basic questions. Here it goes... Let's say you never wanted your GPS radio to be turned on. Let's say that some apps secretly turn on your GPS radio. Let's say that they do it in sneaky ways. Legally. Legitimately. But sneaky. They'll ask for example, if you want "better data" or something like that. And you say yes. Bingo! You just turned on your GPS radio. But you didn't even mean to do that. Each app finds a sneaky way to turn on your radio with your permission. But that permission comes in a variety of sneaky ways. If that's the case, then what you can do to counter that is simply spoof your GPS data, right? You spoof it to the middle of the Golden Gate Bridge. And you ahve it move as if you're walking, by 1 meter per second along the roadway (which teh spoofing apps will do for you). Notice now that it doesn't matter if an app is sneaky in turning on your GPS radio, since if they do turn on your GPS radio, they'll get inaccurate GPS data. Which is fine because you'er not routing. You're just looking up a bird in a database, or you're using Google Lens to look up a painting, or you're using a wi-fi signal debugger, or you're looking for local cell antennas or you're debugging your cellular connection, etc., NONE of which need your GPS location - but they ALL turn it on without you knowing it. Do you understand that analogy? Good. Now apply it to the Wi-Fi access point database please. If an app turns on the precise location without me knowing it did that (which happens all the time - even to me - and I know all about it!), I want it my precise wifi access point data to be spoofed. The question in this thread takes an expert like Andy Burns to answer, where the question is HOW TO SPOOF THE WI-FI ACCESS POINT DATA on Android.
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 09:25 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo6f8sF7ecuU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143864 |
VanguardLH wrote: > Unless Google is changing the high accuracy setting to enabled That is indeed what google did on 16/10/2024 (the day Android 15 was released on Pixels). They enabled it, and left a notification on-screen that they had done so, this wasn't only on my Pixel8a phone which got the upgrade, but also my Huawei tablet (which hasn't been upgraded in years, thanks to the US trade blacklist).
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 13:16 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vflees$1qt$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143867 |
Andy Burns wrote on Sun, 27 Oct 2024 09:25:45 +0000 :
>> Unless Google is changing the high accuracy setting to enabled
>
> That is indeed what google did on 16/10/2024 (the day Android 15 was
> released on Pixels).
>
> They enabled it, and left a notification on-screen that they had done
> so, this wasn't only on my Pixel8a phone which got the upgrade, but also
> my Huawei tablet (which hasn't been upgraded in years, thanks to the US
> trade blacklist).
Hi Andy,
I need to ask you point blank questions, mainly to understand the Android
15 issue better & then to come up with a usable spoofing solution for all.
1. I get it that Android 15 automagically toggles to on the switch at
"Settings > Locations > Location services > Google Location Accuracy
> Improve Location Accuracy = On"; but does Android 15 also toggle
the concomitant "Wi-Fi scanning = On"?
Once either or both of those are turned on in Android 15, can you
turn them off and will they STAY OFF after you turn them off if you
do nothing else but reboot the phone a few times (i.e., I know
apps compiled with GSF can turn those buttons back on in pernicious
ways - which is the issue I was trying to explain to VanguardLH).
2. Do you have any idea how to spoof the Wi-Fi location data?
Note: I have no idea "what" these spoofing apps do to Wi-Fi location data.
<https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg>
PS: I wish the famous Jeff Lieberman (of a.i.w fame) knew about
Android what he knows about routers and access points! :)
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 15:23 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo747qFajs0U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143868 |
Andrews wrote: > 1. I get it that Android 15 automagically toggles to on the switch at > "Settings > Locations > Location services > Google Location Accuracy > > Improve Location Accuracy = On"; but does Android 15 also toggle > the concomitant "Wi-Fi scanning = On"? Mine is certainly on, but I don't think google changed that.
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 15:33 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo74pqFajs0U2@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143868 |
Andrews wrote: > Once either or both of those are turned on in Android 15, can you > turn them off and will they STAY OFF after you turn them off if you > do nothing else but reboot the phone a few times (i.e., I know > apps compiled with GSF can turn those buttons back on in pernicious > ways - I've turned the off for a bit, willcheck later if they've been changed, or whether a reboot changes them ... > 2. Do you have any idea how to spoof the Wi-Fi location data? > > Note: I have no idea "what" these spoofing apps do to Wi-Fi location data. Do they require settings under "Developer Options"?
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| From | Jeff Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 12:02 -0700 |
| Message-ID | <pqushj5bcbb63hco2vmkfkbvull8961ksf@4ax.com> |
| In reply to | #143868 |
On Sun, 27 Oct 2024 13:16:12 -0000 (UTC), Andrews <andrews@spam.net> wrote: >PS: I wish the famous Jeff Lieberman (of a.i.w fame) knew about > Android what he knows about routers and access points! :) I've been retired from active involvement in such things since I closed my former palatial office in late 2020. I'm still doing repairs and helping the locals with their PC problems. I haven't been able to put much time and effort into staying up to date because most of my experience and research went through my now closed office. I still read a few Usenet newsgroups, which is how I blundered across this thread. Sorry, but I know nothing about spoofing a wi-fi generated location on an Android phone. I doubt that location information is sent back to some spy agency via wi-fi where it might be intercepted at a router or access point. If they are using wi-fi, one should be able to see NMEA 0183 data using Wireshark, which I only see with GPS trackers. If you really want to track your location, without butchering your phone or having an evil spy agency looking over your shoulder, maybe disabling your GPS (with some aluminum foil shielding), plugging in an external USB hockey puck GPS receiver, and running your own server might be an option: <https://www.traccar.org> You will not be able to benefit from cell tower location accuracy enhancements, but with improved WAAS and additional satellite constellations, you should be ok. The hard part will be to find an Android mapping app that accepts external (USB) NMEA 0183 data. Good luck with whatever you're trying to accomplish. -- Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com PO Box 272 http://www.LearnByDestroying.com Ben Lomond CA 95005-0272 Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 20:19 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo7li5Fd085U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143874 |
Jeff Liebermann wrote: > I know nothing about spoofing a wi-fi > generated location on an Android phone. If GPS is off, and the phone is having to do coarse location via wifi, it checks what visible SSIDs and signal strengths it can see, does an API call on a google database which returns a location ... that's how it works normally ... to fake a location you'd have to poison their database adding fake SSIDs and removing real ones ... basically a non-starter that way. However there is reference to mock location support in the "hidden" developer options, basically an API to feed fake co-ordinates from an app to the phone <https://developer.android.com/reference/android/location/LocationManager#setTestProviderLocation(java.lang.String,%20android.location.Location)>
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 21:45 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfmcak$2h1s$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143875 |
Andy Burns wrote on Sun, 27 Oct 2024 20:19:11 +0000 : > However there is reference to mock location support in the "hidden" > developer options, basically an API to feed fake co-ordinates from an > app to the phone > > <https://developer.android.com/reference/android/location/LocationManager#setTestProviderLocation(java.lang.String,%20android.location.Location)> To add to what Andy Burns in the UK said to Jeff Liebermann in Santa Cruz, all you do to fake (aka mock) GPS location on Android are these easy steps. a. Download & install any free adfree fake/mock/spoof GPS app. b. Enable Android Developer options and turn mock location on c. In Developer options, you choose only ONE mock location app d. Then set your GPS location in your chosen mock location app It's that easy to spoof your GPS location to any app. Including Google Maps. However... the question here is how to spoof the Wi-Fi location. Note that in my prior screenshots, some apps say they will "Spoof the Wi-Fi Network Provider" (whatever that means), and/or "Spoof Wi_Fi Provider" (again, I don't know what that means). <https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg> Note these are the GPS spoofing apps that I had tested long ago. Fake GPS location by Lexa <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.lexa.fakegps> Fake GPS Location - LocaEdit <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mobile.fakelocation> Mocation Fake Location by Rasfar <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.rasfar.mock.location> DS Fake GPS Location by Disciple Skies <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.discipleskies.mock_location_spoofer> Mock Location and More by Vyrazu Labs <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.vyrazu.mocklocationfakegps> Cartage - Fake GPS Location by Mock Applications <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mock.cartage> Fake GPS: Location spoofer <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=project.listick.fakegps> AnyGo GPS Spoofer: Fake GPS <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.luckydog.anygoapp> Mock Loc <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.mocker.mockloc> Fake GPS Location Spoofer by Fast Video Downloads <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=fake.gps.location.changer.spoof.location> Movable Mock GPS by Tomer Brosh <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.bomerapps.movablemockgps> GPS Locker Fake your location by Foxbyte Code <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.foxbytecode.gpslocker> Fake GPS Phone Location by Selfie Photo Editor <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=find.my.friends.family.gps.location.tracker> GPS Spoofer MH Tool - Loc Spoof by liqiyu <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.irocket.locspoof> GPS Location Change - Joystick by LovMoMo <https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.momo.fakegps.locationchanger>
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-28 09:11 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo92phFjd13U2@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143876 |
Andrews wrote: > However... the question here is how to spoof the Wi-Fi location. > Note that in my prior screenshots, some apps say they will "Spoof the > Wi-Fi Network Provider" (whatever that means) Do you even know if they do what they claim to?
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-28 15:00 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfo8th$1tio$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143882 |
Andy Burns wrote on Mon, 28 Oct 2024 09:11:13 +0000 :
>> However... the question here is how to spoof the Wi-Fi location.
>> Note that in my prior screenshots, some apps say they will "Spoof the
>> Wi-Fi Network Provider" (whatever that means)
>
> Do you even know if they do what they claim to?
Hi Andy,
Are you asking about course GPS location or the precise Wi-Fi location?
I'm confused why you ask that since I already answered both a few times.
a. Certainly the course GPS location is spoofed - there is no doubt of it.
b. But I have no idea (yet) how to spoof the precise Wi-Fi location output.
I said a few times that mock-location apps certainly successfully spoof the
course GPS location but I don't know what "Spoof the Wi-Fi Provider" does.
<https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg>
Spoofing "precise Wi-Fi" is why I asked the question in the Subject line.
*How to Spoof the precise Wi-Fi Location?*
I'm seeking ideas from anyone how we can spoof the precise Wi-Fi location
(which is wanted for apps that don't need it - which is almost all apps).
Any ideas?
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-28 15:45 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo9ptgFmsbiU1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143884 |
Andrews wrote: > I said a few times that mock-location apps certainly successfully spoof the > course GPS location but I don't know what "Spoof the Wi-Fi Provider" does. > <https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg> > Spoofing "precise Wi-Fi" is why I asked the question in the Subject line. > *How to Spoof the precise Wi-Fi Location?* I would class wifi location as less precise than GPS, I just wondered if you had actually tried the apps which claim to spoof wifi? Don't all the various location sources work via the fused location provider anyway?
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-29 01:44 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfpel5$190$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143885 |
Andy Burns wrote on Mon, 28 Oct 2024 15:45:49 +0000 : > I would class wifi location as less precise than GPS, I just wondered if > you had actually tried the apps which claim to spoof wifi? We can endlessly debate which is more precise, particularly indoors versus outdoors, so I don't want to get bogged down on that - namely because I don't want *any* location lookups when I'm using an app that doesn't need it such as the insect-lookup app that I used to find out what this bug is <https://i.postimg.cc/25vNnXwk/googlelocationaccuracysettings-spoof.jpg> I'm not talking about routing apps by the way, as they do need at least the most course of lookups in order to route you. I'm talking about apps that do not need your location at all - or which don't need precise location - and yet - because they're using Google API's - they *require* it to work. > Don't all the various location sources work via the fused location > provider anyway? Ever since Jeff Layman brought up fused location services a few years ago, I've never understood what they are - so I can't answer that question. However, most of my knowledge (and understanding) is empirical, where I *do* understand what my eyes are telling me when I run a variety of tests. The main test I run is the following: 1. I install & set up the Lexa mock-location app in Developer options. 2. In Lexa, I set my location to the middle of the Golden Gate Bridge. 3. In Android "Location Settings" I turn "Location = On" 4. At this point, all other "Location Services" are not enabled a. Google Location Accuracy = off b. Google Location Sharing = off c. Google Location History = does not exist d. Wi-Fi scanning = off e. Bluetooth scanning = off f. Earthquake alerts = off g. Emergency Location Service = off In "App Permissions" no apps have "Location" allowed. (yes, even Google Maps has "Don't Allow" for location access. Also in "App Permissions" no apps have "Nearby devices permission". This is my normal setup (since Lexa runs at boot), which is that no apps have access to location, and even if they did, it's a spoofed location. But now I want to *test* if my location is being spoofed, right? I need an app that wants GPS but which doesn't force precise location. Finding that app isn't as easy as you might think it is, simply because most apps use GSF spyware which forces precise location even though the app doesn't need it. But I just tried OSMAnd~ (version 4.5.1.0) which let me keep "approximate location" and it thinks I'm on the Golden Gate Bridge. But let's try a more pernicious app, such as Google Maps which won't work unless I enable "Precise Location". If I fight with Google Maps, repeatedly telling it to keep the "Approximate Location", eventually (after three or so repeats), Google Mpas gives up trying and then it starts working, but it thinks I'm on the middle of the Golden Gate Bridge. At this point, I've "fooled" Google Maps, right? Well, not really. Sure, Google Maps thinks I'm on the Golden Gate Bridge because Google Maps fought with me and lost the battle for me to enable Precise Location. But now let's say I want to route with Google Maps by choosing a desired destination. You can't "Choose start location" of "Your location" because Google Maps will complain "Can't apply some route options. Try again". What I can do is "Choose Start Location" by selecting "Choose on map" where Google Maps zooms to the destination first, but I can hit the "Where am I" button to get Google Maps to zoom back to the San Francisco Bay. Now Google Maps will create directions from the "pin location" to the destination (where the pin location is my spoofed location) but it won't update it because "Precise Location Denied" keeps coming up in Maps. So I give in and give Google Maps "Use precise location = on", and a funny thing starts happening. Google Maps thinks I'm in San Francisco, and then a few minutes later, Google Maps realizes (presumably from my neighbors' Wi-Fi access points perhaps - or maybe from cellular tower geolocation data) that I'm not. So Google Maps gets confused and jumps back and forth between the two locations every few seconds. What does this tell me? I think it implies that Google Maps is using GPS to think I'm in San Francisco, but it's using my dumb neighbors' Wi-Fi access points to know I'm not. So it gets confused. From that, I'm gonna guess that I'm spoofing the GPS, but not the WI-Fi location (which is what I think it means to get "precise location" although "precise location" could use cellular tower information for all I know. What does it mean to allow Precise Location anyway? Anyway, to speed things up, I set Lexa to move 10 meters every 10 ms, and Google Maps keeps trying to re-route me as Lexa moves me from point to point but not following the path that Google had set up for me to follow. In order to prevent Google Maps from figuring out I'm in two very different locations at the same time, all I really want to do is kill the Wi-Fi access point data - by spoofing it to nonsensical information so Google Maps can't use it so Google Maps has to rely on the GPS information alone. The main question, I just realized, is not how to "spoof" the Wi-Fi access point data (of nearby Access Points) but how to zero them out so that any app that "wants" Wi-Fi access point data gets nonsensical data that it can't make any sense of - so - it has to rely on the GPS data alone. But how? How do you make sure Wi-Fi access location data is zeroed out?
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| From | Andrews <andrews@spam.net> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-27 22:34 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <vfmf57$s71$1@nnrp.usenet.blueworldhosting.com> |
| In reply to | #143874 |
Jeff Liebermann wrote on Sun, 27 Oct 2024 12:02:27 -0700 : > I've been retired from active involvement in such things since I > closed my former palatial office in late 2020. Good for you that you finally retired from all that work, especially now that Mike at Ridge, Loren at Hilltop, Etheric, Surfnet, etc., are competing with the likes of Frontier (although Andrea Lovelady at Surfnet says they received a series of 10 million dollar grants to put fiber in the Santa Cruz mountains). To bad Brett, in Arizona, has passed away. RIP Brett. He was acerbic, to say the least, but he got the job done when needed. > Sorry, but I know nothing about spoofing a wi-fi > generated location on an Android phone. Don't worry. I don't know how to do it either, but I'm confident it is simply done with software passing fake data via the Google APIs. This set of screenshots of mine show they do "something" like that. <https://i.postimg.cc/ZKXjT326/mocklocation01.jpg> Android mock location <https://i.postimg.cc/SRvdYzsF/mocklocation02.jpg> Best mock location apps <https://i.postimg.cc/DySBk5j2/mocklocation03.jpg> Mock location setting <https://i.postimg.cc/7L8BN7Nq/mocklocation04.jpg> Spoof wifi/gps provider <https://i.postimg.cc/MZPdFgYP/mocklocation05.jpg> Randomize road speed <https://i.postimg.cc/gcRk8q1c/mocklocation06.jpg> Spoof Wi-Fi provider I just have to figure out HOW to tell what the heck they're spoofing. Maybe WireShark, Netstumbler, WiGle, etc., might tell me. Dunno. You're the Wi-Fi expert who taught me everything I know, way back in the day when I was trying to spoof my MAC address (now the AP MAC addresses are spoofed by default on iOS and Android). You told me, long ago, that you can't spoof the ROUTER's WAN-facing MAC address though - which - unfortunately - is the one we'd want to spoof! > I doubt that location > information is sent back to some spy agency via wi-fi where it might > be intercepted at a router or access point. If they are using wi-fi, > one should be able to see NMEA 0183 data using Wireshark, which I only > see with GPS trackers. The problem is that 9,998 out of 10,000 people have their phones set up to hand Google (and others like Mozilla) the unique BSSID & unique GPS location of your home router's access points. My phone doesn't do that, of course, but I'm the 1 out of 9,998 people who has his phone set up responsibly. The rest are irresponsible rude people. Given 9,999 out of 9,998 people are rude & irresponsible, what I have to do to keep my unique router access point SSID out of Google's (and others') databases is more than just append "_nomap" to opt out of the database. If you just append "_nomap" to the outward-facing access-point SSID, all that accomplishes is Google "says" they will scrub you out of their db. But all the phones that drive by my house will still UPLOAD that unique BSSID & GPS information (and signal strength, and a few other things) to the Google (and other) databases - so you have to trust that Google will scrub it. While Google probably does scrub the unique BSSID & GPS location of your home router access points that have "_nomap" appended, you can't trust that all the similar databases will do so, e.g., Apple got in trouble recently for handing out four hundred at a time of these datapoints to hackers. <https://www.theregister.com/2024/05/23/apple_wifi_positioning_system/> So what do you do on Android to keep the 9,999 rude people out of 10,000 people from UPLOADING your unique BSSID & GPS location to those databases? You "hide" the broadcast! It' that simple (almost). Yes, we're all well aware that hiding accomplishes nothing in terms of security but it actually accomplishes "something" in terms of privacy. Remember those 9,998 rude people? All of those 9,998 phones won't even "see" a hidden broadcast SSID! So they no longer UPLOAD your unique BSSID & GPS location to the databases. But what about the other person in the 2 out of 10,000 people? That person is using something like WiGle or WireShark, and that person will, of course, see the hidden SSID but that person isn't the major concern. The major concern are the 9,998 rude people who upload your unique BSSID and GPS location to the Google (and other) databases which, if you look at the URL I provided above, are abused like you can't believe by hackers. Now, there "is" a problem with hiding the SSID broadcast of your home router, which is that if you have auto-reconnect set on your phone, then your phone will be "L@@KING" for that specific SSID - which - for the tinfoil hat folks (I've been accused of being one of them) is a no no . So you have to turn OFF the auto-reconnect to the home SSID (you could geofence automate it, but that's a whole 'nuther can of privacy worms). So now you're as private as you're gonna get, in terms of Wi-Fi... 1. You set your home router to NOT broadcast your router's AP SSID 2. You set the phone to NOT automatically reconnect to that AP SSID 3. You add a homescreen shortcut to make the manual connection a single tap The result is: a. Your home is the only home in town that is NOT in the Google database (Apple too, Mozilla too, who knows how many others there are) b. Your phone does not shout out your AP BSSID when you're away from home This is good. Except.... All your stupid neighbors are in the 9,998 out of 10,000 rude people only this time it's 9,998 out of 10,000 routers are throwing your privacy under the bus instead of the 9,998 out of 10,000 phones we spoke about above. You can't get all your neighbors to put "_nomap" on their SSID. They're too stupid. Yes. I've tried. They don't get it. It's where I've learned that most people are incredibly stupid. Somethuign this simple is beyond their comprehension. Google takes advantage of that. So does Mozilla. And Apple. (Even Microsoft does with its "_optout_" shenanigans.) > If you really want to track your location, without butchering your > phone or having an evil spy agency looking over your shoulder, maybe > disabling your GPS (with some aluminum foil shielding), plugging in an > external USB hockey puck GPS receiver, and running your own server > might be an option: > <https://www.traccar.org> > You will not be able to benefit from cell tower location accuracy > enhancements, but with improved WAAS and additional satellite > constellations, you should be ok. The hard part will be to find an > Android mapping app that accepts external (USB) NMEA 0183 data. I do NOT want to "track my location". I can already do that. We've *always* been able to do that. What I don't want is Google/Mozilla/Apple/etc. tracking my location. The way to do that is what I'm seeking. I can already do it for GPS. But I don't know how to do it for Wi-Fi. > Good luck with whatever you're trying to accomplish. All I'm trying to do is spoof the Wi-Fi location the same way that I'm already spoofing the GPS location when I'm using an app that doesn't need either but which has Google GSF incorporated into it so it asks anyway. A cellular debugger doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location information. A weather app doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location information. A browser app doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location information. An insect lookup app doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS loc information. A security camera setup app doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS loc data. A wifi signal strength app doesn't need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location. None of these apps need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location information; but Google forces them all who use GSF to get it for Google. That's the problem I'm trying to solve. When an app does NOT need precise Wi-Fi or GPS location information, why should I give it to them. I don't need it. The app doesn't need it. It's Google who wants it. I've already solved the problem for "my" Wi-Fi access point. But I have the problem of the 9,998 rude people's Wi-Fi access points. Those are my neighbors who are the dumbshits throwing me under the bus. I need to spoof THEIR wi-fi access point BSSID & GPS locations on my phone. So that's the issue I'm trying to solve on the Android phone. a. How to spoof GPS location information (done). b. How to spoof Wi-Fi location information (that's the question!)
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| From | Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk> |
|---|---|
| Date | 2024-10-28 09:08 +0000 |
| Message-ID | <lo92jiFjd13U1@mid.individual.net> |
| In reply to | #143878 |
Andrews wrote: > I just have to figure out HOW to tell what the heck they're spoofing. I doubt anything goes over the wire to be wiresharked, it's a local API on the phone. There's sample code on github/stack overflow etc, or just use an existing mock app?
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