You want to know your kids got home safely. You want your aging parent to be able to call for help without fumbling with a phone in a crisis. You want a way to say "I'm okay" or "come now" that works faster than a text message. These are completely reasonable things to want from a safety app.
What's less reasonable — and what most apps don't make obvious at signup — is the business model running behind that peace of mind. Before you install, it's worth a few minutes to understand what you're agreeing to.
The Freemium Model and Why Your Location Has Value
Family tracking apps that are free — or even some that charge a subscription — often generate significant revenue from your data. Location data is one of the most valuable data types in the digital advertising ecosystem, and it's not hard to understand why.
Where your family shops, what time your teenager leaves for school, which medical offices you visit, which neighborhoods you pass through on evenings and weekends — all of this can be packaged into detailed audience profiles and sold to advertisers, data brokers, or other buyers in the information supply chain.
Some of the largest family tracking platforms have been publicly reported for selling user location data to data brokers. In at least one disclosed case, a state attorney general brought action against companies in this data supply chain. That doesn't make these apps villains. But it does mean you should understand the business model before you hand them your family's daily movements.
Others have built full advertising platforms designed to target users based on first-party family and location data — meaning your app usage itself becomes a targeting signal for ads you see elsewhere on the internet. The data isn't just collected. It circulates.
What Your Phone Already Does — And Where It Falls Short
Some people ask whether the apps built into your phone — Apple's built-in location sharing or Google Maps sharing — are enough. It's a fair question. Here's the honest answer: they help, but they're not the same thing, and there's a privacy issue most people don't realize.
Apple and Google native location sharing does let you share your real-time location with specific contacts. But there's a critical catch: both platforms, by default, allow other apps on your phone to request access to your location data. That means the apps you've installed — weather apps, social apps, store apps — may be receiving your location in the background and sharing or selling it to third parties. You opted into phone-level location sharing, but the data doesn't stay contained the way you might expect.
Beyond the privacy gap, built-in tools also don't offer what Active SOS was designed around:
- Native location sharing sends your location to one person at a time, or to a contact list — it doesn't send a formatted alert with context ("I need help at this location") to your entire group via SMS in one tap.
- It doesn't support custom alert types — there's no way to pre-configure a "relapse check-in," "dangerous meeting," "school lockdown," or "I'm safe, heading home" message that goes out instantly without typing.
- Standard iMessage or SMS check-ins require you to type and send — in a crisis, that's often not possible. One tap is a completely different capability.
- Built-in sharing doesn't include group management — you can't organize emergency contacts into groups where members control their own sharing preferences and can revoke access without the other person controlling it.
- Recipients of a native location share must have the same platform (Apple to Apple for iMessage, etc.) or a compatible app. Active SOS alerts go to anyone by SMS — they need nothing installed.
Crash Detection on newer iPhones and Pixels is genuinely useful and we think everyone should have it on. But "my phone can detect a car crash" and "my family can reach me in any crisis with one tap" are different capabilities, and only one of them is Active SOS.
Sold — Ever
What to Look For in a Privacy-First Safety App
If you decide a dedicated safety app is right for your family, here are the questions to ask before downloading. The answers should be easy to find — if they're buried or missing, that's a signal.
- Does the app run background location tracking continuously, or only when the user chooses to send an alert?
- Does the app sell or use your location data for advertising, data brokers, or any purpose other than the safety function you downloaded it for?
- Do recipients need to download the app to receive an alert, or does it work via standard SMS?
- Can the tracked person turn off location sharing themselves, or does control sit with the tracking parent or the company?
- What happens to your location history if you cancel your subscription or delete your account?
- Is the company's privacy policy written in plain language, or does it require a law degree to understand what you're agreeing to?
The Active SOS Model
Active SOS was built around a different premise: your safety data belongs to you. Location is only shared when a user chooses to send an alert, or when a member opts into location sharing via explicit invitation — and that sharing can be revoked at any time by the member, not by the parent or the app company.
The app never runs in the background collecting location data. We have never sold, shared, or used location data for advertising or any purpose other than the specific safety function you downloaded the app for. That's not a feature — it's a principle.
Beyond privacy, here's what Active SOS offers that your phone's built-in tools and most tracking apps don't:
- Unlimited custom alerts — not one generic SOS button. Set up alerts for medical emergencies, dangerous meetings, weather events, relapse check-ins, school lockdowns, or any situation that matters to your family.
- 17-digit GPS precision, accurate to room level — more accurate than most family tracking apps that rely on cell tower triangulation.
- SMS delivery to anyone — recipients don't need to download anything. Your alert reaches them as a text with your exact location.
- Opt-in member location sharing that the member controls, not the parent, not the platform.
Active SOS is also HIPAA-security aligned — designed from the ground up to handle sensitive situations with the privacy standards that medical and behavioral health use cases require. If your family is using a safety app for recovery support, eldercare, or medical monitoring, that matters.
The Right Safety App for Your Family
The right family safety app is the one that gives you what you actually need — real-time alerts when it counts, genuine location accuracy, and tools that fit your specific situations — without trading things you shouldn't have to give up.
You shouldn't have to choose between knowing your family is safe and knowing your family's daily movements are being packaged and sold. A privacy-first safety app gives you both. The market has options. The questions above will help you find the one that's right for you.
If Active SOS sounds like what you've been looking for, download it free at activesos.com. It's $180/year for up to 10 users through the App Store — but we offer a $90/year group discount rate for schools, families with students, and group purchases. Contact us for your discount code. That's half the App Store price, with zero data sold, ever.
Safety Without Surveillance.
Your Family Deserves Both.
Active SOS is $180/year for up to 10 users in the App Store — or $90/year with our group discount code. No background tracking. Zero data sold — ever. Unlimited custom alerts. GPS accurate to room level.
$180/yr App Store · $90/yr with group discount code · Contact us for your code
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