Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Mobile
  5. News

Google Maps will let you enter Incognito Mode, and it won’t store your data

Add as a preferred source on Google

Google has started realizing that people care about their online privacy. At Google I/O 2019 the company announced a number of new features for the privacy-aware. Perhaps the biggest and most important feature is that Incognito Mode will now be available in Google Maps.

But what does that mean? Well, when you use Google Maps, your location information is stored by Google, and linked to your Google account. In Incognito Mode, however, that location information won’t be stored — meaning that if you don’t want your information from Maps saved, you no longer have to manually delete it. It’s important to note that just because Google doesn’t have location information about you, that doesn’t mean that your wireless carrier won’t have it. Incognito Mode is also already available on YouTube.

Recommended Videos

Incognito Mode in Maps isn’t the only new privacy-focused feature Google announced at Google I/O. The company also discussed new ways to control how much information Google keeps about you. Now, you can tell Google to delete your Google data history after 18 months, three months, or delete it manually. The feature will be coming to your account settings in the coming weeks. The new auto-delete feature was actually first announced last week, but it’s now rolling out — so you can set up your account to delete data now.

It will soon be easier than ever to access your privacy settings, too. From Google apps, users will soon be able to tap on their profile picture, then tap the “Manage your Google account” button, after which they’ll have access to privacy and security controls. This so-called “one-tap access” will be available this month in Maps, YouTube, Chrome, and more apps on Android

Privacy on Android isn’t the only focus for Google, which also announced a few new privacy features for the web. You can now use any phone with Android 7.0 or later for two-factor authentication, which should help take a lot of the hassle out of safely logging in to your Google account.

Tech companies like Google and Facebook have been increasingly focused on privacy over the past year or so. Google, in particular, has been moving a lot of processing to on-device, which helps ensure that features like Google Assistant are quick and safe.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
The world’s chip lord issues price hike warning that’s going to hurt your phone and laptop
TSMC, the company behind the chips in virtually every consumer device, says inflation is driving up costs and hasn't ruled out passing them on.
TSMC Fab

The world's largest chipmaker has signaled that rising costs may force it to increase prices for the chips that power consumer devices and AI infrastructure.

Speaking to the BBC, TSMC CFO Wendell Huang confirmed that inflation is driving up the company's costs and did not rule out passing those increases on to customers. He stopped short of committing to sudden dramatic increases, saying the company would not impose "fourfold, fivefold" price rises. TSMC chairman and CEO CC Wei separately told shareholders the same day that he would "like" to raise prices, as competitors have already done.

Read more
Everything Apple announced at WWDC 2026: iOS 27, next-gen Siri, AI upgrades, and more
Apple stopped making promises at WWDC 2026 and started delivering: Siri AI, six OS updates, and Cook's farewell.
WWDC 2026 poster

Unlike most years, Apple’s WWDC 2026 carried more weight than usual, not just because it was Tim Cook’s final keynote as CEO, but also because it represented Apple’s chance at redemption after missing deadlines, mounting questions, and criticism about its ability to keep pace in the AI race. 

Fortunately, Apple answered many of those questions on June 8, 2026, unveiling an upgraded AI-powered Siri alongside a range of new Apple Intelligence features, while also raising a few fresh questions. WWDC was packed with announcements across six operating systems that underpin Apple’s ecosystem of devices. 

Read more
iOS 27 offers the clearest sign that a foldable iPhone is right around the corner
Resizable iPhone apps may be Apple’s first step toward a foldable iPhone
iPhone Ultra

Apple’s WWDC 2026 event was packed with major software announcements, including its new Siri AI experience, expanded child safety tools, and the latest operating system updates for its phones, Macs, and iPads. It was only a matter of time before someone dug out something interesting from the new software, and developer Sam Henri Gold might have just found the biggest clue yet that Apple is planning to launch a foldable iPhone soon.

iOS 27 is quietly preparing apps for a foldable future

Read more