I read this article this morning and found it interesting on a whole number of levels. Whilst it has become normal for people to expect invasion of privacy in the West (Asia, Russia etc), the East (US etc) has often been long associated with advocating civil liberties.<br>
<br>However, the overdrive by commercial companies to take marketing to a new level, from beyond knowing where they live (jurisdictions like Fiji it is mandatory for operators to register every phone sold and to whom and if you lose a phone you must inform the companies that sold it to you), to desiring to know movement, what transactions take place via phones, what you eat etc in the desire to create and sell better products, lifestyle changes etc.<br>
<br>I recall the NZ Cyber Crime Police investigating Google for taking unlawful shots and pictures of some of the towns and cities for Google Earth etc. <br><br>Whilst it was somewhat "normal" to expect surveillance (however discreet) from governments, like in France etc, it was not and never normal for commercial entities to cross over. Now they have.<br>
<br>Clearly where technology advancements in the past were locked down and secured by usually Military Laboratories, we are finding more and more that corporates who heavily invest into Research and Development since the 80s are at par if not way more tech savvy than their military research and development which is possibly one of the reasons why private corporates in some jurisdictions are contracted to develop for countries military systems etc.<br>
<br>These phone trackers are very low level of course.<br><br><h1 style="margin-bottom: 2px;">
<span id="ctl00_ContentPlaceHolder1_news_title">iPhones don't track anyone; Google handsets do, says Steve Jobs</span></h1>
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<span id="ctl00_ContentPlaceHolder1_posted">27 April 2011</span> | <a href="http://www.telecomtv.com/comspace_newsDetail.aspx?n=47520&id=e9381817-0593-417a-8639-c4c53e2a2a10&utm_campaign=DailyNews270411iphonesdonttrack&utm_medium=email&utm_source=TTV-Daily-News-Alert#comments">
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<div class="vidbody"> <p>
<span id="ctl00_ContentPlaceHolder1_Subtitle">It seems
that although Apple's CEO, Steve Jobs, is off work on long-term sick
leave he still keeps a god-like eye on us all and, from time to time,
even answers our prayers - or perhaps he doesn't. Martyn Warwick
reports.
</span></p></div>
<p>US politicians are taking seriously recent
revelations that the likes of Apple and Google have been secretly
tracking the locations of users of their devices. The House Energy and
and Commerce Committee has written to the CEO's of these (and other)
corporations asking them to provide information about such practices and
why they are doing it. A Congressional investigation could follow.<br>
<br>
Senior executives at Apple are asked, "What location data do devices
running your operating system track, use, store, or share?" and "Why
does the device track, use, store, or share that data?" Those companies
sent the letters (HP, Microsoft, Nokia and RIM are on the list as well
as Apple and Google) have to respond by "no later than May 9, 2011."<br>
<br>
After last week's revelations that each iPhone stores a user's
unencrypted location data for months at a time and routinely sends it
back to the company without the user being aware, it has also come to
light that Google's Android smartphones do exactly the same thing. The
question is "why?"<br>
<br>
And now the concern that was initially confined to the US is spreading
around the world. There is considerable disquiet in Europe and now the
South Korean regulator is demanding information on the secretive and
possibly illegal practice.<br>
<br>
And outraged reaction is also spreading across America.
</p><div style="text-align: center; margin-top: 15px; margin-bottom: 10px;">
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In Tampa, Florida, two iPhone users have filed a
federal class-action suit against Apple on the grounds that they would
not have bought the devices had they been made aware that the company
would clandestinely track their movements.<br>
<br>
Apple and Google have said almost nothing in response to the growing
chorus of disapproval about their sneaky machinations but both companies
have, in the past, confirmed that users can stop location data being
collected via the simple expedient of turning-off the device's
location-based services.<br>
<br>
However, when the news about the alleged tracking broke, the Wall Street
Journal newspaper undertook an investigation of its own and found that
the disablement of location-based services on the iPhone 4 it used had
no effect on the collection and retention of location data.<br>
<br>
Then, yesterday evening London-time, the story got an extra twist when
the MacRumors site reported that it had made email contact with Steve
Jobs himself and asked him about the tracking allegations.<br>
<br>
Here is a transcript of the MacRumors exchange with the sainted Steve.<br>
<br>
"Q: Steve, Could you please explain the necessity of the passive
location-tracking tool embedded in my iPhone? It's kind of unnerving
knowing that my exact location is being recorded at all times. Maybe you
could shed some light on this for me before I switch to a Droid. They
don't track me."<br>
<br>
A: Oh yes they do. We don't track anyone. The info circulating around is false. Sent from my iPhone.<br>
<br>
Now, first off, we don't know that Jobs himself was the one who replied,
and secondly, the response leaves much unanswered. For example is the
responder denying that the iPhone's tracking capability doesn't exist?
(When we know that it does and there's plenty of independent evidence to
prove it). Or is the reply no more than a reiteration that although the
embedded tracking facility exists, Apple does not actually collect and
manipulate the data that is periodically downloaded from the devices?
And, if that's the case, why does the location tracking and time
stamping happen in the first place?<br>
<br>
I think we should be told. People will probably have something quite
rude to say about their mobile handsets becoming de facto electronic
tagging devices that just happen go in your pocket or purse rather than
around the ankle. The effect is the same though - they know where you
are.<br>
<br>