Ride-hailing apps like Rapido run on a simple promise, you share your data and in return, you stay in control. Your phone number, your routes, your location, all of it sits behind permissions like “only while using the app.” That’s the deal. But what if that control isn’t as solid as it seems? A recentreportby Digit raises exactly that question and the findings are definitely a bit unsettling.
Our folks at Digit noticed something strange during daily commutes. Even without actively using the app or keeping it running in the background, Rapido appeared to know their exact location. Not vaguely. Not occasionally. Precisely. Every single time the reporter from the Digit team passed through Kashmere Gate Metro Station, a notification would pop up, right on cue. Same place, different times of the day, same result. At first, it seemed like coincidence. Then it became a pattern. And patterns are hard to ignore.
Limited Permissions, Unlimited Awareness?
The app was installed from the official App Store, and location access was restricted to “only while using the app.” Under normal circumstances, that should limit any background tracking. Yet, the notifications kept coming. What makes this more puzzling is that the team observed this behaviour only on an iOS device. An Android device running the same app, same account, same routine, showed none of these location-triggered alerts. Just regular promotional notifications.
As highlighted in Digit’s report, this isn’t a one-off experience. Similar concerns have surfaced on platforms like Reddit and LinkedIn. One LinkedIn post, dating back over a year, described nearly identical behaviour. That suggests this isn’t a recent glitch. It may have been quietly happening for a while.
In response to their queries, Rapido clarified that it does not track users in real time when the app isn’t active. Instead, the company pointed toward Apple’s system-level features. According to Rapido, iOS may trigger notifications based on “areas of interest” or past usage patterns. In simpler terms, your phone might be predicting your routine and nudging you accordingly, without sharing live location data with the app.
Why This Raises Bigger Questions
Even if that explanation holds, it still leaves a slightly uneasy feeling. If an app can trigger location-based alerts without being actively used, where exactly does control lie? As Digit’s report points out, this isn’t just about one app. It’s about how digital privacy works in practice. Your location isn’t just data, it’s a timeline of your life. And when that starts feeling predictable to someone else, even a system, it stops being convenient and starts feeling invasive.
To better understand whether these points point to a privacy breach or simply a misunderstood system behaviour, Times Now Tech reached out to industry experts for clarity.
Speaking toTimes Now Tech,Abhilash Guptasaid the incident does not necessarily prove that Rapido was secretly tracking users in real time.
Source: India Latest News, Breaking News Today, Top News Headlines | Times Now