Location Tracking Joke
Also known as: Phone Tracking Meme · Targeted Ad Joke
Location Tracking Joke memes are a broad family of internet humor built around the unsettling reality that smartphones, apps, and tech companies know where you are at all times. Spanning formats from image macros to tweet threads, these jokes typically play on the gap between what users think is private and what their devices actually record. The format picked up steam alongside rising smartphone adoption in the early-to-mid 2010s and still circulates widely across social media1.
TL;DR
Location Tracking Joke memes are a broad family of internet humor built around the unsettling reality that smartphones, apps, and tech companies know where you are at all times.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
Platforms
Timeline
2023-01-15
First appears
2024-01-01
Location Tracking Joke started spreading across social media platforms
2025-01-01
Location Tracking Joke is still actively used and shared across platforms
How to Use This Meme
The Location Tracking Joke format is flexible and doesn't follow a rigid template. Common approaches include:
The Targeted Ad Setup: Describe mentioning something casually (in conversation, in a text, or even just thinking about it), then show an ad for that exact thing appearing instantly. The humor comes from the speed and precision.
The Permission Request: Screenshot or describe an app asking for location access when it has no logical need for it. Flashlight apps, calculators, and simple games are popular targets.
The FBI Agent: Frame the joke from the perspective of a fictional government agent assigned to monitor your internet activity. This version typically plays the agent as bored, concerned, or entertained by your browsing history.
The Resignation: Express complete acceptance of being tracked, often with deadpan delivery. "At this point my phone knows I'm going to Target before I do."
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
A 2019 survey found that over 50% of Americans believed their phones were listening to their conversations for ad targeting purposes, despite limited technical evidence supporting the claim. The memes both reflected and reinforced this belief.
The "FBI agent" variant became popular enough that some users created wholesome versions where the agent genuinely cares about the person they're monitoring.
Apple's iOS 14 update in 2020, which added orange and green indicator dots showing when apps access the camera or microphone, generated a fresh wave of location tracking memes as users could now "see" the surveillance happening.
The joke format is one of the few meme families that gets funnier as technology improves, since better ad targeting gives people more material.
Derivatives & Variations
"My FBI Agent" memes:
A dedicated sub-format imagining a specific government employee assigned to watch your screen. Spawned its own templates featuring characters peering through windows or looking at monitors[1].
"Targeted Ad" screenshots:
Real or fabricated screenshots of suspiciously relevant ads appearing at uncanny timing, shared as evidence of phone surveillance.
App Permission mockery:
Screenshots of apps requesting excessive permissions, sometimes edited or exaggerated for comedic effect.
"Alexa/Siri is listening" jokes:
Extension of the format to smart home devices, with jokes about virtual assistants eavesdropping on private conversations[1].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (1)
- 1List of Internet phenomenaencyclopedia