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Repeater admins often put the device out in the wild.
For theft prevention, they sometimes configure a 'wrong' position.
This may raise questions by the inhabitants of the choosen place (i.E. fire department, who see a repeater is at their place (but in real isn't) which raises questions and uncertainty).
If you could configure the exact position and have a marker that it shouldn't be published exactly, then lat/lon could be set to null for i.e. the digits representing < 1,11 km, and the bit signals the position is not correct - and maps could display it with a circle.
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I recommend a bit for position ambiguity.
Repeater admins often put the device out in the wild.
For theft prevention, they sometimes configure a 'wrong' position.
This may raise questions by the inhabitants of the choosen place (i.E. fire department, who see a repeater is at their place (but in real isn't) which raises questions and uncertainty).
If you could configure the exact position and have a marker that it shouldn't be published exactly, then lat/lon could be set to null for i.e. the digits representing < 1,11 km, and the bit signals the position is not correct - and maps could display it with a circle.
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