05 June 2008

Your Cell Phone As A Tracking Device

No, not you using it to track something or someone, but the government or others having the ability to track you by way of your phone.

The technology has been around awhile, and it would be illegal in the U.S. But a new report out, showing that people don't stray too far from "home," utilized a method of study that has privacy experts up in arms. And rightfully so, I think.

"Researchers secretly tracked the locations of 100,000 people outside the United States through their cell phone use and concluded that most people rarely stray more than a few miles from home. The first-of-its-kind study by Northeastern University raises privacy and ethical questions for its monitoring methods, which would be illegal in the United States.


Yes it would. But does anyone care? Even now that some cell companies are trying to convince users to allow such tracking? Or even authorizing cell companies to flip a switch and track their kids' locations when dad or mom gives them a new phone?

"The scientists would not disclose where the study was done, only describing the location as an industrialized nation.

"Researchers used cell phone towers to track individuals' locations whenever they made or received phone calls and text messages over six months. In a second set of records, researchers took another 206 cell phones that had tracking devices in them and got records for their locations every two hours over a week's time period. The study was based on cell phone records from a private company, whose name also was not disclosed.

"Study co-author Cesar Hidalgo, a physics researcher at Northeastern, said he and his colleagues didn't know the individual phone numbers because they were disguised into "ugly" 26-digit-and-letter codes. That type of nonconsensual tracking would be illegal in the United States, according to Rob Kenny, a spokesman for the Federal Communications Commission. Consensual tracking, however, is legal and even marketed as a special feature by some U.S. cell phone providers.

"The study, published Thursday in the journal Nature, opens up the field of human-tracking for science and calls attention to what experts said is an emerging issue of locational privacy."

Hmmmmm . . .

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Gosh! Amazing! Technology is able to do some amazing things with gps tracking devices!
Many believe that the main reason that GPS tracking system was put into cellular phones was to allow parents to watch where their children are at all times. But the real reason is one that is in much greater demand. It is enhanced 911 or e911 which is emergency phoning abilities; this came into effect after 9/11. The GPS tracking technology was integrated into each cell phone that was manufactured so that by the year 2005, each cell phone on the market would have GPS technology. Each cell phone company had to comply with the new regulations that allow each cell phone to be tracked within one hundred meters or less of a location.