Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy

Phone or Tracking Device? 397

Red Wolf writes "The first major commercial service that traces people's locations using their mobile phones -- mapAmobile -- is designed more to ease the minds of worried parents and suspicious bosses than to enable unauthorised spying."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Phone or Tracking Device?

Comments Filter:
  • by mao che minh ( 611166 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:14PM (#6638696) Journal
    "The provider said safeguards were in place to protect civil liberties."

    That's how it always starts. As more and more companies use it, and when corporations finally control it, those safeguards will slowly be peeled away in the name of security and efficiency - by then it will be so common that most of us probably won't even notice the loss of privacy at all, and others will even encourage it in order to help catch criminals.

    FP

    • by sahonen ( 680948 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:16PM (#6638719) Homepage Journal
      I keep my cell phone encased in lead.
    • Hopefully, they will have some sort of limitation where only the account holder of the phone can activate this service. I don't need any psycho ex-girlfriends knowing where I am at all times!!
    • Sorry.. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Neuracnu Coyote ( 11764 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:23PM (#6638816) Homepage Journal
      ..but if you are really interested in moving around throughout this land of ours with being tracked by big brother's watchful eye in the sky, then you can LEAVE YOUR NOKIA AT HOME.

      It's a no-brainer.
      • Assume for a moment you are part of a group of sysadmins who must rotate 24/7 support coverage by carrying a company cellphone. Now lets add cellphone tracking to the picture. You now have a situation where although in theory you are on your own time, you must carry the phone, and have it on, and thus be tracked.

        The biggest question I have, is can you get a report for where the phone HAS been, not where it is. Can you get information going back say 24 or 48 hours? If you can't now, I'll bet you will be abl
    • State Laws (Score:3, Informative)

      by bmasel ( 129946 )
      While the Feds have mandated location tracking for 911, it was left to the States to pay for it. as legislatures take this up, they can be pushed to place legal limitations on use, including clear opt-in for non-911 use, and liability for telcomms who leak, or make unauthorized use. Particular attention should be paid to archiving of the locater data absent opt-in.

      State legislatures also have the power to set Statutory standards for law enforcement access to location data.

  • no thanks... (Score:5, Informative)

    by garcia ( 6573 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:15PM (#6638704)
    I am more worried about the 2005 law that requires GPS/triangulation in all cell phones for 911 call locating. Here's [popsci.com] a link to an article in Popular Science about China and how people were using their cell phones to find out which buildings were infected with SARS.

    People play a game where you "kill" a nearby person after you locate them using your cell phone equipped with GPS. Just what I want, ANYONE to be able to locate me on the street (opt-in service or not isn't my point).

    The first major wave of location services could beam to the U.S. as early as Christmas, when 44 percent of the nation's 149.2 million cellphone subscribers are expected to be traceable, according to the research firm In-Stat/MDR.

    No thanks, I would prefer to die after placing a call to 911 rather than have whoever decide that they want to track me via GPS/triangulation.

    Live free or die.

    Just my worthless .02
    • Re:no thanks... (Score:3, Insightful)

      Prefer to Die? Prove it. i think you're full of shit.
    • Re:no thanks... (Score:3, Insightful)

      by stratjakt ( 596332 )
      Then dont use a cell phone.

      Theres nothing anonymous about cell technology, there never was, and never will be.

      It's idiotic to think so. You can trace a land line, whats special about a cell phone?

      Frankly I dont give a rats ass if you die on the side of the road after calling 911. I'm more worried about the people in the other car, who aren't nearly as paranoid and delusional as you are.
      • Re:no thanks... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by garcia ( 6573 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:31PM (#6638927)
        land lines aren't carried around with you where ever you go. If you decide to pick up and go to City X no one knows that you did that.

        Old school triangulation was an effort that took quite a bit of time and wasn't something that was used all the time.

        I don't need my cell phone being equipped with GPS and having them beam localized advertisements to my exact location (I am standing outside McDonalds in downtown Place X) and BAM, a text message that says "Eat Rotton Ronnies Today!"

        How about I leave the house and drive down the road at 91mph because I feel like it and the police track me going 91, wait for me ahead, and pull me over?

        That's what I am worried about.
        • Re:no thanks... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Planesdragon ( 210349 ) <`slashdot' `at' `castlesteelstone.us'> on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:40PM (#6639022) Homepage Journal
          How about I leave the house and drive down the road at 91mph because I feel like it and the police track me going 91, wait for me ahead, and pull me over?

          That's what I am worried about.


          God, I'm not worried about that. You might as well bitch about radar detectors. (Speed Limits, while a tad bit low, are a good idea. You going at 91 anywhere but a nearly-empty highway is reckless endangerment--and in NYS, it'll [rightly] get you tossed in jail.)

          Anyway...

          If you're going to worry about tracking, worry about inaccuracy and corruption. Worry about psychotic ex-boyfriends hacking the system and coming after you. Worry about being politically opporessed. And after you worry, figure out an effective check on the darn thing. (A local log of who pings for your location would solve the first; standard checks against corruption would help against the second.)
          • God, I'm not worried about that. You might as well bitch about radar detectors. (Speed Limits, while a tad bit low, are a good idea. You going at 91 anywhere but a nearly-empty highway is reckless endangerment--and in NYS, it'll [rightly] get you tossed in jail.)

            You are obviously trolling now but I will bite... RADAR *GUNS* have nothing to do w/this. They are not able to instantaneously track EVERY single person driving with a RADAR gun. In fact, they are lucky to get 1 or 2 people out of a massive gro
        • Re:no thanks... (Score:2, Interesting)

          by stratjakt ( 596332 )
          Dont want the cops to know where you are? Dont call 911.

          Dont want anyone to know you went to City X? Then dont take your cell phone to City X, or dont use it when you're in City X.

          Noones tracking you, they're tracking the phone. If its the bosses phone, he has every right to know where it is. If he doesnt want you taking his phone to City X, then thats up to him. If you dont like your boss and his rules, quit and find another job.

          People hear the suggestions of responsibility, and immediately start w
      • Theres nothing anonymous about cell technology, there never was, and never will be.

        You can trace a land line, whats special about a cell phone?

        A land line is tracable only to a location. Many land lines, such as household or business phones, are used by multiple people. Also there are still pay phones, which by definition are used by multiple people.

        Cell phones, on the other hand, are frequently used by only one person. They are also carried on that person or very near to that person at all times. By
    • GPS jammer (Score:4, Informative)

      by sleepingsquirrel ( 587025 ) * <Greg@Buchholz.sleepingsquirrel@org> on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:46PM (#6639086) Homepage Journal
      I guess its time to build your own GPS jammer [phrack.org].
      Overview
      A low cost device to temporarily disable the reception of the civilian course acquisition (C/A) code used for the standard positioning service (SPS)[1] on the Global Positioning System (GPS/NAVSTAR) L1 frequency of 1575.42 MHz.

      This is accomplished by transmitting a narrowband Gaussian noise signal, with a deviation of +/- 1.023 MHz, on the L1 GPS frequency itself. This technique is a little more complicated than a simple continuous wave (CW) jammer, but tends to be more effective (i.e. harder to filter) against spread spectrum based radio receivers. ...

    • Solutions (Score:3, Interesting)

      by phorm ( 591458 )
      For the cellphone manufacturers: Make phones with tracking/etc as an option. If you generally prefer privacy, but have an accident of sorts (and are, one would hope, at least coherent enough to push of button) allow the "trackable mode" on the cellphone to be an option

      For cellphone users: There's a big button the phone called "off." As long as you're not expecting a call, you can just turn the damn thing back on when you need to dial out. If you're still paranoid, yank the battery or get a lead-lined case
      • Re:Solutions (Score:3, Informative)

        by shaitand ( 626655 )
        Cellphone manufacturers don't have the option, neither does the consumer. The tracking is now mandated by law.

        Turning off the phone doesn't do any good if there is a battery buried inside the casing keeping the tracking unit going....
  • by Hayzeus ( 596826 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:15PM (#6638709) Homepage
    Sorry, but "easing the mind of a suspicious boss" is still "unauthorized spying" by any reasonable definition of the term.
    • Sorry, but "easing the mind of a suspicious boss" is still "unauthorized spying" by any reasonable definition of the term.

      "Unauthorized Spying" : Spying or other surveliance upon an individual or target without legal authorization to do so.

      Seems to me that a suspicious boss can have "legal authorization" to find out where their employees are. Espeically if the boss is giving the cell phone.
      • That definition works for law enforcement, not for corporations. Try this one:

        "Unauthorized Spying": Survelliance without prior explicit or implied consent of the surveilled.

        Obviouslly the OP had your definition in mind; my point was merely that employee surveillance is generally obnoxious (with exceptions) even at the corporate level, as are drug tests (for most professions), email monitoring, etc.

    • Maybe this is trollish, but I have just to say

      ACK.

      Why was the poster of the story so easily deceived by the company's advertisement and differentiated between "suspicious bosses" and "unauthorized spying".
      Brain-wash at work.
  • It costs money, and is only in the UK. I would imagine considerably more time to get something like this here. And even if a company launched it (without some group getting wind of it), it could easily be recalled by the FCC (if they so desired).
  • by dtolton ( 162216 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:16PM (#6638718) Homepage
    I find the wording of the press release ironic.

    <paraphrase>
    This device isn't really for spying, it's more to allow parents to spy
    on their children, and employers to spy on their employees.
    </paraphrase>

    They of course fail to mention that if the technology were available, a judge
    could easily grant a warrant to allow authorities to observe your
    movements without notifying you.

    In many ways this is worse than Orwellian, because at least in
    Orwell's vision, you could still hide from the cameras or escape to
    places that didn't have cameras on them. With this device if you had
    it on (assuming it works as well as they claim (doubtful)) they could
    pinpoint your location all the time. I guess you could just leave it
    in your office while you went to play that round of golf and say you
    were in a meeting. ;)

    Still this technology is simply a herald of more instrusive technology
    to come. Move over Orwell, the future may be worse than you imagined.
    As someone said in an earlier story, doubleplusungood.
    • They of course fail to mention that if the technology were available, a judge could easily grant a warrant to allow authorities to observe your movements without notifying you.

      sigh...why is it that the RIAA ought to embrace filesharing as a technological inevitability, yet we should somehow stem the tide of technological innovation in other areas? Just get used to it: technology will move forward, always, in directions you may like, in directions you may dislike, and in directions you could never imagine


    • This device isn't really for spying, it's more to allow parents to spy
      on their children,....

      Spy well, dear parents, for your children will be the ones taking care of you in your twilight years....

    • It's actually been technically feasable for a long time. A couple years ago I watched a documentary where they were showing how (also in the UK) they could locate any phone within about 3 meters (or is that 'meteres'?) to 'assist emergency services' in locating a caller.

      No idea if the service was actually used that way.
    • In many ways this is worse than Orwellian, because at least in Orwell's vision, you could still hide from the cameras or escape to places that didn't have cameras on them. With this device if you had it on (assuming it works as well as they claim (doubtful)) they could pinpoint your location all the time

      Firstly this has been available for over 6 months and it works. Secondly the facility has to be enabled on the phone, and disabling is no more complex than a menu selection. Thirdly any cellular telephone
    • They of course fail to mention that if the technology were available, a judge could easily grant a warrant to allow authorities to observe your movements without notifying you.

      Cops don't *need* a warrant to observe you. Not even without this. There's never been any sort of protection against observing people.

      I don't like the idea of a tracking device much, but for Chrissakes we can do without the damned 1984 bit every time.

      Btw, if that was a troll, great job!

    • "This device isn't really for spying, it's more to allow parents to spy on their children, and employers to spy on their employees."

      If you treat people like they're a problem waiting to happen or you expect them to be misbehaving, then they'll act like they a misbehaving problem. Honestly I think things like this create more problems than they solve.

  • "more to ease the minds of worried parents and suspicious bosses than to enable unauthorised spying."

    Except that it still can be used for spying!
  • Options... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bobthemuse ( 574400 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:17PM (#6638739)
    How long will it take before there's a option on the mobile device to disable this? Even if they don't offer it, I'm sure it'll be hacked pretty quick.

    Or a novel idea, turn the phone off!.
    • Re:Options... (Score:2, Informative)

      by bigfleet ( 121233 )
      Indeed, straight from their site.

      The mobile you are locating needs to be switched on and within network coverage

      How novel!
    • I recently bought both the Samsung A500 and N400 phones. (Both interfaces are almost exactly alike.)

      Settings -> Location -> On/Off

      Notice (as shown in the display):

      Turning location on will allow the network to determine your position, making some Sprint applications easier to use. Turning location off will hide your location from everyone except 911. Even if location is turned on in this handset, no service may use your location without your express permission.

    • > Or a novel idea, turn the phone off!
      This may sound easier than it seems. The boss/your wife/... may ask you later:
      Why have you switched off your phone at that time?!
      Do you have anything to hide??

      And if a phone doesn't support switchting of the location-service you have to explain it, because they may have called you and not tracked you down. (At least, they could say that).

      Social pressure may build up to use such a "service".
    • My Sanyo 8100 allows me to turn off location tracking
    • For GPS-enabled phones, you can probably turn the GPS part off.

      For infrastructure-based systems, if the phone is on, it can be tracked. How the phone company chooses to safeguard the information is the real issue. It's possible to decouple the identity from the data for purposes doing things like traffic probes.

      The infrastructure-based systems use either the arrival times to each antenna (which requires VERY good time syncronization) or they calculate the angle of arrival to a set of antennas. It is also
  • I'm sure it will work better and more casually than the tracking device I have bolted around my teenage son's ankle!
  • SIM Card tracking? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by marshac ( 580242 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:19PM (#6638759) Homepage
    I wonder how this works since SIM cards are pretty small. Regardless, I like it.... to a point. Where I work, we have a lot of people who drive a lot of miles in their own cars. At $.365/mile, this adds up quickly (almost $1200/month). Even still, almost all of them cheat padding their monthly miles, or taking a very long route to get someplace. If they KNEW that they could be tracked, it might give honesty a kick in the pants. Where I don't like it is when someone is spied upon and never told. That's just not cool.
  • This service will cause so much grief and end end so many marriges when significant others find out we are not late at the office but in the pub, or the locator dot is unexpectedly situated over one of their girlfriends houses.
  • If your boss gets these cell phones great dont want to be tracked pull the battery out while in the car. This is realy no worse that truckers being tracked like they are now. For your kids well hrm they dont have any reasonable expectation of privacy untill 18 from there parents at least. Well I hope they dont if I'm civily responcible for them. Now the funny thing before everybody cries out about them getting warents to get the info guess what they can do this now I have worked with a phone company to
  • An interesting interview with Virgin's Richard Branson on UK TV noted that Virgin Mobile aided European Police locate a suspect down to a part of a city in mainland Europe - that I say is a good use, but I understand why John Connor lived outside of the system :/
  • Riiight... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Phoenix823 ( 448446 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:22PM (#6638799)
    is designed more to ease the minds of worried parents and suspicious bosses than to enable unauthorised spying."

    And Kazaa is really just designed to transfer information back and forth. It's not Sharman Network's fault that it gets used to infringe on an incredible number of copyrights.

    Let's face it, just because it was designed to ease parents and bosses, that's no guarantee whatsoever that they will not be used to violate one's civil liberties. RFIDs are designed to help stores keep inventory and make checkouts easier, but they can be easily abused to "see" what someone is wearing on his person.

    We champion the right to use products in nonstandard ways all the time here at /., we say it's alright to use the Xbox as a home PC even though that's not what it was designed for. For that very reason alone, I am 100% sure that this will be used to infringe on at least one person's privacy.

    And I think to myself, what a wonderful world.
  • A suspicious boss has no right to spy on you... suspicion does not consistute the right to spy.
    Three cheers for self employment!

    • Does too. If you're supposed to be at place X during company time, you've better be there. Say you're at place X but have a phone signal that says you're in place Y, you've got some explaining to do. Ask Jayson Blair.
      • That just perpetuates the slavery of employment... if you are the kind of person who can't garner trust and respect from your employees, you deserve what you discover... Paranoid maniacal "CONTROL" breeds environments where everyone spends 6 hours a day trying to appear real-busylike, covering their ass and trying to "look good". Trust is contagious.
  • Not the first. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by davetrainer ( 587868 ) <slashdot.davetrainer@com> on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:24PM (#6638824)
    AT&T Wireless has had this for quite some time [go.com]. It's called find-a-friend, and it lets you locate and be located by other AT&T GSM customers that you specify. I do have a GSM/GPRS phone with AT&T and I've read a little about the feature, but never used it.
    • -I've read a little about the feature, but never used it.

      I looked into it as I also have an ATT GSM phone. Based on what I read it doesn't do the mapping thing, but gives you the closest intersection (which I guess would map nicely in MapQuest.)

      I vote that which ever of us gets a friend first tries it out, lets the other know how well it works.
  • ... for location tracking always include the ability to have someone else get ahold of this information. This is why I don't have a cell phone. In theory, they could track what cell tower I was connected to anyway, and get a rough idea of my location. Granted, a normal POTS line has a definite endpoint, but it's not one that is carried around.

    I can see benefits to this technology, since 911 operators will have an easier time dispatching emergency personnel, and it might even be useful for delivery dri
  • by Liquorman ( 691815 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:24PM (#6638835)
    to use this when waking up after a huge drinking binge to find out where the hell I am.
  • by morven2 ( 5718 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:25PM (#6638848)
    Of course, what value is coerced consent? The two groups of people this is clearly intended to be used on -- children and employees -- will not be 'consenting' in any kind of free manner.

    'Consent because I'm your legal guardian and can consent on your behalf' and 'Consent or lose your job' don't really count as consent in my book.

    The cellphone is becoming a tool for employers to squeeze away the last vestiges of a personal life for their employees. First is the expecation of being contactable at all hours, day or night, instantaneously (and thus the expectation that people will never be doing anything they can't be called away from). Now, they can't just contact you, they can find out where you are, at any moment, and without your knowledge.

    And as for those of us living in the United States, you really think the Justice Dept. isn't going to press for access to this kind of thing -- with as little judicial safeguards as they can get away with?

    Ugh.
  • Hmmm.... (Score:5, Funny)

    by Bob Vila's Hammer ( 614758 ) * on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:26PM (#6638858) Homepage Journal
    Can you see me now? Can you see me now?
  • Oh (Big) Brother (Score:2, Insightful)

    by segment ( 695309 )
    As long as In Q Tel [cia.gov] doesn't buy them out one shouldn't pay much thought to this considering the following:

    1) You have the right to question the vendor of a product your buying and determine whether or not you want this.
    2) No one is making this a standard it is a company doing what they want, so I don't see the big hoorah around this
    3) It might actually come in handy considering if someone were kidnapped, this could be a possible method of determining their whereabouts.

    Sure there are pros and cons behind thi

  • Remember TIVO (Score:2, Insightful)

    by grims ( 602269 )
    It could become lucurative business to sell such information
    Remember TIVO which now dishes key press information out to bidders at a zip code level - they could do something like that...
  • The terms and conditions of the service define a "Locatable User" as "the owner or keeper of a Locatable Mobile Phone who has consented to being Located."

    In a confusing definition, a Locatable Mobile Phone is defined as "a mobile telephone registered with the Service by a Locating User."
    Do they mean Locatable User? If not, this seems to indicate that I add someone else's phone to the registry, then they are notified and have to give consent, and then I can locate them. This seems like an odd mechani
  • that we saw this article [slashdot.org] on location-tracking software in PDAs, using simple triangulation. I wonder if this uses a similar technology?

  • By disable, I mean break into a million pieces (or functional equivalent). Will the phone work without it? If not, how do you misinform it so that it is not accurately giving up/out your location?
    • I don't believe that too many phones have a GPS chip. They use triangulation to figure out you're location based on the signal strength relative to a bunch of different cellular towers. You can do this with just about any radio technology, given at least 3 points.

      Anyway, this technology is in effect so long as you're phone is turned on. Breaking any chips inside will give you a nice paperweight. If you don't want to be tracked, ditch your phone or turn it off.
    • gps in phones doesn't seem to be the biggest issue to me. As you mention, GPS capability is dependent on your phone having a certain set of properties -- which can be changed/hacked/smashed.

      What seems the bigger issue is the triangulation by cel tower, because that is possible entirely independent of any hacking you may do to the phone. It would only reveal your location when you use it, true. But the problem is, there is nothing you could do to prevent it, and you have only the good word of the company (o
    • There is no GPS (Score:4, Informative)

      by jetmarc ( 592741 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:51PM (#6639149)
      This system seems to be UK based. In UK, the digital cellular systems is GSM/PCS. GSM base stations have a theoretical maximum diameter of 35km (15-20 miles?). Since the 1999/2000 boom in subscriber quantity, most cells top out at 2-3km and can be as small as 100m (300 foot) in town centers. Also, cells usually are segmented into 3 slices of 120 degrees each, to maximize channel re-usage ability.

      Another GSM feature is the "timing advance", which roughly indicates the distance of a mobile from its base station. It is necessary, because GSM is time multiplexed. A mobile is assigned a "time slot" for transmission. To avoid interference between mobiles that are far away from the base stations and those that are near, the far mobile sends its packet a little bit too early. It then travels a the speed that radio waves use to have and arrives dead-on its time slot. While "timing advance" is originally used only for this purpose, it obviously also is a good indication of where the mobile is.

      The mobile knows all these values - each base station has a unique identifiyer, and the timing advance is measured every N seconds (which btw is the reason why GSM mobiles are spec'ed for travel speeds of 250km/h max).

      The trace system basically "phones-home" this information, where the base station ID is looked up in a database to find out where the mobile is.

      This is not new. Former Viag Interkom in Germany offered such a service, too. Once registered, you could look up the position of a mobile through an internet page. There's also a travel assistance service of D1 Telekom Germany, where you call in, hang up, the system traces your position, and sends a text message with traffic jam information etc (for your current position) to your mobile.

      All these systems base on the same method of locating you, but are marketed differently.

      But back on-topic: there is no GPS. As simple as that.
  • Parent: Jr, I've told you 1000 times that I want you to call us and tell where you are going.
    Jr: Gee whiz, when we got to the park the payphone was busted.
    ...
    Parent: Here is a mobile phone for you. Now you have no excuses.
    ...
    Jr: The battery ran down.
    ...
    Parent: I've just bought you an always on, methanol powered, auto-locating phone.
    ...
    Jr: The dog ate it.
  • Sorry, but spying is spying. Spying by authorities on the people of this nation, whether they be government or employer or any other type of authorities, is reprehensible.
  • Three words (Score:5, Insightful)

    by WCMI92 ( 592436 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:33PM (#6638952) Homepage
    Turn it off...

    I keep my cell off a lot. Why? I use it for MY convienence... It's for me to make a call, not to be pestered when I'm in the car, at the mall, eating dinner, etc.
  • by KReilly ( 660988 )
    This article brings up an important trend in the slashdot readers, technology vs privacy. Many say that some technologies should never be explored, and I disagree.
    I think that other technologies will come to mask the effects of this one, and thus balance and privacy will be restored.
    I feel that the general tone that these are inherently bad for their potential to become aweful, but personally I would prefer for this to come to the publics attention rather then being used secretively without our knowledge
  • And this is new? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bagheera ( 71311 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:34PM (#6638958) Homepage Journal
    Cell phones are RF devices. They broadcast. They say "I am here!" and the nearest cell tower says "Cool. I'll patch you in here until you reach the next cell." The phone company could track you to within the radius of a given cell since day one. As the technology has matured they've been able to better locate individual phones. It's a side effect of providing better coverage and more efficient service.

    If you're worried about people tracking you by your cell phone, turn it off - and be aware that as soon as you come on the air to make a call, "they" will have a good idea where you are.

    All this new service does is make that knowledge accessible to someone who's not monitoring cell sites inside the system. The addition of GPS in the phones makes it dramatically more accurate, but it's not really a new capability.

    If you're worried about the Law tracking you down by your phone, then you should probably ditch the cell and go back to pay phones. Ditch the calling card too.

    As for parents, if I give my kid a phone, and I care enough about her to wonder where she is, then tracking her with the cell (especially one I'm paying for) is my parental right. Parents are responsible for their kids. Part of that responsibility is having an idea whether they're out raising hell or really are over at their friend's studying like they said they were.

    Bosses? Different matter and entirely situational. Company phone, company car, company time, the boss has the right to know whether or not I'm abusing my privilege. My phone? My time? Hell no.

    Sure, they can track us with our phones. Big fat hairy deal. You don't want them to track you? Then don't carry a -transmitting- radio in your pocket!

    • As for parents, if I give my kid a phone, and I care enough about her to wonder where she is, then tracking her with the cell (especially one I'm paying for) is my parental right. Parents are responsible for their kids. Part of that responsibility is having an idea whether they're out raising hell or really are over at their friend's studying like they said they were.

      I whole-heartedly agree (I am not a parent, but I believe that parents should take an active part in their life long learning).

      What I want
      • To answer your question, no, I wasn't constantly hounded by my parents while I was growing up. They'd ask where I was going, and would usually take "Over to (insert friend here)'s to play." at face value.

        Yes, sometimes we didn't go where we said we were going, and yes, we got in trouble when we got caught. I had a good balance oif trust with my folks.

        Please note, I'm not advocating constantly tracking kids by phones, rfid, or radio tracking collars. I'm just pointing out that this is a potentially usef
  • until all phone companies are required to have phones tracking systems installed this is not a real problem. I can see a service that will redirect your calls to a different cell-phone, with a provider of your choice.

  • If I remember correctly they used similar tech to locate Kevin Mitnick in that bad book (and movie).. Though this would not fly in the US as people would freak out if they knew someone could track them anywhere they were.
    So paranoid are people..
  • "OK clean up and scram, mom's 10 minutes away"

    "Dammit don't drop the weed everywhere!"

    "Next time look where you throw your bra"
  • T-Mobile GSM phones have had this capability for about two years now. The thing is that it is not active on any of the phones due to concerns about customer backlash with the whole tracking thing. Once companies have worked past the acceptence issue, you can expect T-Mobile to active this feature.

  • Since this past February anyone has been able to see where my phone is in real time right here [gadgeteer.org] A cool map [gadgeteer.org] of everypoint I have driven past.
  • by Lord_Dweomer ( 648696 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:44PM (#6639057) Homepage
    In other news: Sales in tin-foil up 5%! Film at 11.

  • Japan vs US/EU (Score:2, Informative)

    by Jonah Hex ( 651948 )
    From the article

    In Tokyo, meanwhile, Japanese singles can punch up profiles of prospective mates strolling the same stretch of sidewalk.

    Not that TechTV is enough to make me an expert on the subject, but they just did a piece on this for the "Wired for Sex" show. Seems the opportunities for meeting new people to date are extremely limited in the Japanese culture, which traditionally has been restricted to older relatives introducing youngsters, and of course further back they simply pre-arranged marriages.

  • by dimss ( 457848 )
    I have an idea. Just make this tracking info accessible to general public. Imagine web site with query form. Enter phone number and get name and location of cell tower nearest to this phone.

    Nice. Then let people pay to get hidden from general public.
  • yeah, but (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Tumbleweed ( 3706 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @04:51PM (#6639142)
    I bet the parents of those two missing kids in Massachusetts would really love it if their cellphones (which are currently defaulting into voicemail) had this ability. I mean, they're probably dead, but at least they'd know.

    Perhaps a cheaper device, nothing more than a panic button that uses the cellphone system, would be a good alternative. It also wouldn't ring and alert your kidnapper that you have it. It wouldn't solve every situation, but I bet it'd be pretty useful in many.

    Plus, it would be another product for the cellphone companies to make and sell service on. Get one for every member of your family! Not anywhere near as expensive as a cellphone, so more people could afford them, and they'd all need service, though, like 911, the service portion should be free. These should definitely not be anonymous, though, or the prank potential would be enormous. Plus, you'd want to know who to be looking for. Perhaps have your information (name, address, photo, etc.) at the phone company when you sign up for service, when the thing goes off, all that info is instantly routed to the cops.
  • My phone has it.. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by nolife ( 233813 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @05:02PM (#6639244) Homepage Journal
    My Sanyo 4900 has a location service. The paper instructions and phones internal help system claim if I shut the location system off, only 911 facilities will be able to know my location. What this really tells me is that it is always on from the phone end but Sprint will only pass the signal to the 911 system, not anyone who wants it. I also assume that the police will also have access to this also if needed or wanted. There is NOTHING that prevents law enforcement from going to Sprint or any other carrier and requesting a list of all users that were in a certain area at a certain time. This IS what the system is really being pushed for and why the Office of Homeland Security is the government department responsible [google.com] for this E911 service implementation.

  • Old hat (Score:3, Interesting)

    by CausticWindow ( 632215 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @05:11PM (#6639352)

    in the old world.

    Over in Europe we've had services like this for at least two years.

    Some just show your location based on the current base station you're connected to, and some are more sophisticated and uses some kind of triangulation (maybe based on what base stations you have been in contact with the last minutes? I don't know).

    I've tried it a couple of times, and it's seems to be quite accurate give or take some fifty meters.

  • by Txiasaeia ( 581598 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @06:35PM (#6640207)
    My telecom is always able to track me if i'm using my phone. Of course, I have a landline...
  • seen it (Score:5, Informative)

    by enbody ( 472304 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @06:37PM (#6640217) Homepage
    I spoke with a developer with a working system. The phone companies can (as in "do now") provide the location information, and security is provided through certificates. If, for the moment, you assume that certificates work, you get to control who gets to see your location information. You can hand it off to your friends or boss, and you can turn it off (stealth mode) at any time. I saw it working and it is pretty impressive (or scary for all the reasons already mentioned). Also, once the infastructure is in place (which it now is), it is trivial to implement.

    Coercive permission and court warrants would get around perfect security (if such a thing existed).
    However, my point is that the infastructure is in place right now (in US) and implementation is easy.
  • by babyrat ( 314371 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @06:49PM (#6640301)
    It seems the general consensus here is opretty negative on this technology due to it's potential for abuse. However I can't help but feel if a couple of Uni students rigged up the same thing in their dorm room with a couple of pringles cans and aan empty pizza box, everyone would be applauding at how cool it is and how it has the potential to save the world.

    Just a thought...
  • Verizon?? (Score:3, Funny)

    by ewhenn ( 647989 ) on Thursday August 07, 2003 @06:51PM (#6640313)
    Where am I now?

    Good!

What is research but a blind date with knowledge? -- Will Harvey

Working...