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Information about duplicate city names in the USA.
{{UserMaintainedTop}}
<br>
Waze has a strong commitment to protecting your privacy and anonymity.


== Duplicate City Name Error ==
==Privacy options in the client app==
By default, Waze is configured to keep your details private. This protection is not perfect due to privacy leakage.


<p>WME will prevent you from adding a city name to a segment if
The [[User_Manual#Privacy_Menu|User Manual]] explains the configuration settings for privacy.
any segments in your state have the same city name, and they are more than a
few miles away. The error message <b>“The
highlighted road is too far from the city it was added to”</b> will be
displayed when you save. This is done to prevent elongated [[Smudged city| City Smudges]] in WME and the client.</p>


== Waze’s Original Solution to Prevent Duplication ==
==Privacy Leakage==
Privacy leakage is the disclosure and linking of personal information to an apparently anonymous profile. Privacy leakage is not unique to Waze. In fact Waze has very good privacy settings and policies. But they are not perfect, and some problems are inherent to any internet connected service that may contain location information, including Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and your photos (which may be geotagged). The fact that Waze supports all these options compounds the problem.


<p>Waze resolved duplicate city names when they launched the
This list of ways you can lose your privacy is intended to be complete, but there may be other ways not yet recorded.
map three ways.
# When a small town was surrounded by a larger township of the same name, the smaller town was identified as <b>Foocity</b> and the larger municipality got the name <b>Greater Foocity Area</b>. Sometimes this happened even if the names didn't match.
#When the towns were separated by some distance, Waze appended a counting number behind the name. So you might see <b>Foocity (2)</b> and <b>Foocity (3)</b> on the map in addition to <b>Foocity</b>.
#Waze dumped the city name altogether, which is one reason you see gaps in the Cities layer and roads with no city name.</p>


<p>None of these are elegant solutions. Each state will need to
===Driving location===
decide on a local solution if they want to clear duplicate names from their
Waze is configured by default to display your location as an anonymous driver. To add to your privacy, the location display is delayed, so the location given is where you were 2 minutes earlier.
state, as there are a wide variety of municipal configurations in the USA.</p>


== Better Scheme for Removing Duplication ==
The location of [[Glossary#Wazer|Wazers]] is publicly available to other Wazers and on the internet. Rather than being anonymous, you can choose to have your location associated with your nickname.


<p>As long as the city name differs by one character, you will
Even when your location is displayed anonymously, there can be privacy leakage. On long highways, isolated country roads, or when traveling at a distance from your home, even anonymous location can disclose your identity. It is possible to identify you from your driving location or driving patterns, especially when combined with an identifying nickname, or other location databases. If you arrive at home and leave Waze on, it will show you in your driveway or home. This may be enough to locate your street address. Public databases such as local government (county) tax and rating records and phone books can be used with an address to find a full name and other personal information.
not get the error message. But we don’t recommend kludgey fixes. The best way
to clear duplication is to find something unique, but accurate, that identifies
a municipality.  
*Examples
**If a borough and a township share the same name, rename the township segments to read <b>Foocity Twp</b>.  
**In Pennsylvania, we have several instances of three or more townships sharing the same name. So we append the county name to the township name, <b>Foocity, Countyname</b>, since that is how they are uniquely identified to the state government.</p>


<p>The simplest scheme is to resolve conflicts in this order:</p>
And if a Wazer comes close enough to see your car and its license plate, that car registration information can be used to collect personal information and identify you.


<p>1. If a postal area or CDP (Census Designated Place as found on the [http://www.census.gov/geo/maps-data/maps/2010tract.html Census Tract Maps]) and a city conflict, append something to the city name, since CDPs and Postal areas don’t have any other common appellation.</p>
===Nickname and Username===
When you first install Waze you are given a random user name. If you change this user name, you may provide additional information about your identity. A first name may be enough to identify you if people observe you regularly driving to the same company location, or to the same street address. Having your company name as part of your nickname may help identify you. Using the same nickname as you use on other social networks like Twitter or Facebook may help identify you. Making a forum post using your nickname where you mention your real name or other personal information may help identify you. This personal information can then be linked to your Waze nickname and Waze identity.


<p>2. If a well-known city and a lesser-known city conflict, the most well-known keeps the unadorned name.</p>
The same issues apply to your username which is used on the Waze website, including [[Map editing|map editing]] and [[Discussion Forums]]. Your choice of username and nickname may make it easy to link the two.


<p>3. If all else is equal, choose one to keep the original name, and add the minimum clear suffix to alter the others.</p>
===Twitter===
You can choose to link your Waze account to [[Twitter]]. By default this will post your road reports to Twitter. You can also choose to tweet your destination, ETA and road munching reports. All of these will disclose your location and movements. By default Twitter accounts are open to the public, and not just your followers. Your Twitter profile may include personal information which can be linked to you and your Waze identity.


== Changing or Merging an Entire City Name ==
===Facebook===
You can choose to link your Waze account to [[Facebook]]. By default this will show your Facebook profile picture to everyone. Facial recognition can be used to identify you. You may choose to disclose your name from Facebook (which is supposed to be your real name).  You can also choose to update Facebook with your destination, ETA and road munching reports. All of these will disclose your location and movements. Your Facebook profile may contain more information that allows you to be identified and that information linked to your Waze identity.


<p>Using mass editing tools to change a city name on all segments
===Foursquare===
is strongly discouraged. The mass editing tools can lead to errors and loss of
You can choose to link your Waze account to Foursquare. If you then choose Report/Check in with Foursquare, then Foursquare will disclose your location. Your settings on Foursquare may be linked to other networks such as Facebook and Twitter and update those as well. Your Foursquare image and profile and links to other social networks may allow you to be identified and that information linked to your Waze identity.
data. The correct procedure is to contact your Region Coordinator with the old
city name, new city name and a permalink of the center of the area. The coordinator
will then ask Waze to make the correction in their database. A side benefit is any polygon with the old city name will be removed at the same time. Merging two cities should also be handled the same way.</p>


== Cities Layer ==
===Waze Groups===
=== Purpose ===
You may not link to Twitter or Facebook, but you may be a member of a [[Waze Groups|Waze group]]. Some of these groups are linked to Twitter. You make a traffic report which is shared with the group, and the group automatically sends it to Twitter and Facebook. Your Waze username (not your nickname) is published in the group membership list, together with the date you joined.
<p>Currently, the cities layer in WME is only used to display
the city name and polygon on the client and provide a location for client
warnings. It is also believed to be used when you  search for a city in WME. Some users have speculated that this layer will be used for native address
search, but this has never been confirmed by Waze. </p>


=== City Polygon Creation and Updating ===
This makes it very easy to link your Waze nickname with your Waze username, and reveals information about your probable location and interests.


<p>Many of the city polygons were created by Waze at the
If you do not choose to be anonymous, your icon displayed on the map to other wazers includes an icon badge representing your main group, which can make it easier to identify you amongst the group members.
original map import. They were not visible to editors in early versions of WME.
</p>


<p>Waze runs a server process regularly that looks for new
===Automatic road reports===
roads or road segments with changed city names. If the city name is new, a polygon
Your Waze client app may [[No_pause_option|issue false traffic congestion reports]], thinking you are stuck in traffic, rather than having stopped traveling at your home and work. A series of reports makes it much easier to identify a [[glossary|wazer]] living or working at a nearby location. It is important to turn off Waze when you have finished traveling, and not just put it in the background. This still remains a problem, as such false reports can be generated just by starting Waze to plan a route before departing.
will be created to cover all the segments with the same name. If a polygon with
that name exists, Waze will sometimes expand or contract the polygon to match
the new road locations. Experience has shown that many of the older polygons resist
changes and remain the same shape, no matter what city name you apply to the roads.
Waze has never explained this.</p>


=== City Name and Polygon Removal ===
This also means the social part of the social GPS (chit chat) cannot be used from a stationary location without both disclosing your location, and generating false traffic congestion reports.
Waze runs a server process periodically that removes city polygons if there are no road segments with that name. Experience has shown that many of the older polygons are not removed by this process. Also, the old city name can remain on the map, even if the polygon is gone. Your Regional Coordinator can request that Waze remove these polygons and ghost names. The process is the same as [[Duplicate_cities#Changing_or_Merging_an_Entire_City_Name | Changing a City Name]].
 
===Manual Road reports and Chit chat===
These reports disclose your Waze nickname, your location, and possibly direction of travel. Making a [[Road reports|road report]] or [[Chit chat]] where you mention your real name or other personal information may help identify you. If you choose to publish road reports to Twitter, your nickname can be linked to your Twitter profile. Chit chat is considered to be a road report for the purposes of publishing to Twitter and Facebook. By default, road reports are sent to Twitter when you link Waze to your Twitter account. Road reports may also be sent as a Facebook update if you link Waze to Facebook, but the default setting is not to send to Facebook.
 
A combination of your Facebook or Twitter profile, and your nickname chit chat may help disclose personal information about you.
 
===Creation and editing of roads===
When you [[recording a new road|record a new road]] or edit the layout or details of an existing road, your Waze username is linked to that road. It is natural to edit roads around your home, work, and along your common routes. This may make it easier to identify you and link a Waze nickname commonly traveling on roads created or edited by a Waze nickname.
 
Other map edits such as adding [[house numbers]] are recorded with your Waze username and may make it easier to identify you.
 
===Discussion Forums===
[[Discussion Forums|Discussion forum]] posts are made using your username. If you disclose your real name or other personal information in a forum post, this can be linked to your Waze username.
 
==Practical considerations==
===Using Waze adds an insignificant amount of risk in day-to-day use===
* Most of us are not going to be the target of stalkers.
* Owning a [[client device|smartphone]] running Waze does not mean our home is much more likely to be filled with valuable possessions. Running Waze does mean mean that your are more likely to have home security. But thieves may come to different conclusions.
* Most homes are empty while people are at work from 9am until 5pm. Thieves don't need Waze to know that.
* Waze by itself doesn't disclose if you are home alone, or if your home is empty.
* There are easier ways for thieves to find out which houses to rob.
 
===But be sensible===
* Don't [[Chit chat]] saying your whole family is away for 3 weeks leaving the house empty. You might Chit chat about how you forgot to feed your dog and you hope it doesn't attack anyone.
* Don't Chit chat about anything that makes you a target. For example, don't chit chat about how you hope your jewelery collection is safe in your closet.
 
 
{{UserMaintained}}

Revision as of 16:19, 17 February 2015

Template:UserMaintainedTop
Waze has a strong commitment to protecting your privacy and anonymity.

Privacy options in the client app

By default, Waze is configured to keep your details private. This protection is not perfect due to privacy leakage.

The User Manual explains the configuration settings for privacy.

Privacy Leakage

Privacy leakage is the disclosure and linking of personal information to an apparently anonymous profile. Privacy leakage is not unique to Waze. In fact Waze has very good privacy settings and policies. But they are not perfect, and some problems are inherent to any internet connected service that may contain location information, including Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare and your photos (which may be geotagged). The fact that Waze supports all these options compounds the problem.

This list of ways you can lose your privacy is intended to be complete, but there may be other ways not yet recorded.

Driving location

Waze is configured by default to display your location as an anonymous driver. To add to your privacy, the location display is delayed, so the location given is where you were 2 minutes earlier.

The location of Wazers is publicly available to other Wazers and on the internet. Rather than being anonymous, you can choose to have your location associated with your nickname.

Even when your location is displayed anonymously, there can be privacy leakage. On long highways, isolated country roads, or when traveling at a distance from your home, even anonymous location can disclose your identity. It is possible to identify you from your driving location or driving patterns, especially when combined with an identifying nickname, or other location databases. If you arrive at home and leave Waze on, it will show you in your driveway or home. This may be enough to locate your street address. Public databases such as local government (county) tax and rating records and phone books can be used with an address to find a full name and other personal information.

And if a Wazer comes close enough to see your car and its license plate, that car registration information can be used to collect personal information and identify you.

Nickname and Username

When you first install Waze you are given a random user name. If you change this user name, you may provide additional information about your identity. A first name may be enough to identify you if people observe you regularly driving to the same company location, or to the same street address. Having your company name as part of your nickname may help identify you. Using the same nickname as you use on other social networks like Twitter or Facebook may help identify you. Making a forum post using your nickname where you mention your real name or other personal information may help identify you. This personal information can then be linked to your Waze nickname and Waze identity.

The same issues apply to your username which is used on the Waze website, including map editing and Discussion Forums. Your choice of username and nickname may make it easy to link the two.

Twitter

You can choose to link your Waze account to Twitter. By default this will post your road reports to Twitter. You can also choose to tweet your destination, ETA and road munching reports. All of these will disclose your location and movements. By default Twitter accounts are open to the public, and not just your followers. Your Twitter profile may include personal information which can be linked to you and your Waze identity.

Facebook

You can choose to link your Waze account to Facebook. By default this will show your Facebook profile picture to everyone. Facial recognition can be used to identify you. You may choose to disclose your name from Facebook (which is supposed to be your real name). You can also choose to update Facebook with your destination, ETA and road munching reports. All of these will disclose your location and movements. Your Facebook profile may contain more information that allows you to be identified and that information linked to your Waze identity.

Foursquare

You can choose to link your Waze account to Foursquare. If you then choose Report/Check in with Foursquare, then Foursquare will disclose your location. Your settings on Foursquare may be linked to other networks such as Facebook and Twitter and update those as well. Your Foursquare image and profile and links to other social networks may allow you to be identified and that information linked to your Waze identity.

Waze Groups

You may not link to Twitter or Facebook, but you may be a member of a Waze group. Some of these groups are linked to Twitter. You make a traffic report which is shared with the group, and the group automatically sends it to Twitter and Facebook. Your Waze username (not your nickname) is published in the group membership list, together with the date you joined.

This makes it very easy to link your Waze nickname with your Waze username, and reveals information about your probable location and interests.

If you do not choose to be anonymous, your icon displayed on the map to other wazers includes an icon badge representing your main group, which can make it easier to identify you amongst the group members.

Automatic road reports

Your Waze client app may issue false traffic congestion reports, thinking you are stuck in traffic, rather than having stopped traveling at your home and work. A series of reports makes it much easier to identify a wazer living or working at a nearby location. It is important to turn off Waze when you have finished traveling, and not just put it in the background. This still remains a problem, as such false reports can be generated just by starting Waze to plan a route before departing.

This also means the social part of the social GPS (chit chat) cannot be used from a stationary location without both disclosing your location, and generating false traffic congestion reports.

Manual Road reports and Chit chat

These reports disclose your Waze nickname, your location, and possibly direction of travel. Making a road report or Chit chat where you mention your real name or other personal information may help identify you. If you choose to publish road reports to Twitter, your nickname can be linked to your Twitter profile. Chit chat is considered to be a road report for the purposes of publishing to Twitter and Facebook. By default, road reports are sent to Twitter when you link Waze to your Twitter account. Road reports may also be sent as a Facebook update if you link Waze to Facebook, but the default setting is not to send to Facebook.

A combination of your Facebook or Twitter profile, and your nickname chit chat may help disclose personal information about you.

Creation and editing of roads

When you record a new road or edit the layout or details of an existing road, your Waze username is linked to that road. It is natural to edit roads around your home, work, and along your common routes. This may make it easier to identify you and link a Waze nickname commonly traveling on roads created or edited by a Waze nickname.

Other map edits such as adding house numbers are recorded with your Waze username and may make it easier to identify you.

Discussion Forums

Discussion forum posts are made using your username. If you disclose your real name or other personal information in a forum post, this can be linked to your Waze username.

Practical considerations

Using Waze adds an insignificant amount of risk in day-to-day use

  • Most of us are not going to be the target of stalkers.
  • Owning a smartphone running Waze does not mean our home is much more likely to be filled with valuable possessions. Running Waze does mean mean that your are more likely to have home security. But thieves may come to different conclusions.
  • Most homes are empty while people are at work from 9am until 5pm. Thieves don't need Waze to know that.
  • Waze by itself doesn't disclose if you are home alone, or if your home is empty.
  • There are easier ways for thieves to find out which houses to rob.

But be sensible

  • Don't Chit chat saying your whole family is away for 3 weeks leaving the house empty. You might Chit chat about how you forgot to feed your dog and you hope it doesn't attack anyone.
  • Don't Chit chat about anything that makes you a target. For example, don't chit chat about how you hope your jewelery collection is safe in your closet.


Template:UserMaintained