The act of geotagging photos has come a long way since online photo services began reading EXIF data and sticking it on a map for location-based viewing. Concerns over the clash between tech and personal privacy—especially over the last year—have flourished in the media, forcing users to begin thinking more seriously about who can see what. Because of this shift, popular photo sharing service Flickr has made changes to its privacy settings—users can now specify who can see the geotags on specific photos based on where the photos were taken.

Previously, Flickr users were limited to turning geotags on or off for their photos, and separately limiting those photos to be visible to certain groups of contacts—two functions that happened to work together, but mostly functioned independently from each other. For example, a user might leave geotags off for most of her public photos, but upload certain photos from the club down the street with geotags on. But because she doesn’t want any creepers figuring out the exact address of where she spends most Saturday nights, she might limit those club photos so they’re only visible to friends. Such a solution is imperfect and can be quite tedious to employ; settings that should be changed might get overlooked, or geotags might show up on photos they shouldn’t.

That’s where Flickr’s new geofence settings come in. Announced on the code.flickr blog, the new settings are aimed at giving users more granular control over their geotagged photos. Now, users can put a blanket privacy setting on photos that are tagged from a certain location. Say you often post photos that come from your living room—all of those can now automatically be categorized as Family-only because of the location attached, and without any extra effort on your part. If you post photos from the city park, you might have Flickr mark those as public. And if you want to post salacious photos from the club for only your friends (and not mom and dad) to see, you could have all the photos with the club location automatically marked as Friends-only.

But what if a photo’s geotag falls into an area that overlaps between two geofences with different settings? Flickr says it will default to whatever is the most private setting between those geofences—if one geofence is marked “All Contacts” and the other is “Friends only,” the photo will just default to Friends-only, or entirely private if the parameters call for it.

The point of these changes is to keep users geotagging in an era when general society has finally begun to worry about it. As someone who recently faced a stalking threat that forced me to ditch geotags completely for some services, I can really appreciate Flickr’s changes; they allow me to keep enjoying some of the benefits of geotags (friends can see where I’ve taken photos), while not inconveniencing me when I want to keep things out of the public eye.

“A few years ago, privacy controls like this would have been overkill. Geo data was new and underused, and the answer to privacy concerns was often, ‘you upload it, you deal with it,’” Flickr wrote on its code.blog. “But today, physical places are important to how we use the web. Sometimes you want everyone to know exactly where you took a photo. And sometimes you don’t.”