[bestbits] [governance] GPS mandatory on all mobile phones to be manufactured in India.

Sivasubramanian M isolatedn at gmail.com
Mon Apr 25 22:50:58 EDT 2016


Dear Arsene,

GPS makes navigation precise for the common man, and is of ample help in
finding one's way even while walking in the streets. Parents could use GPS
to ensure that their children are within safe bounds, and there are several
such positive uses. Law and Order agencies would certainly find it easier
to track the elusive criminals and other elements.

But the idea of surveillance over an entire population in order to enhance
Law and Order capabilities over a just a few targets is a disturbing idea.
Besides raising privacy concerns for the common man, it causes a totally
different kind of security problem for the average person, whose
whereabouts are not only known to responsible officers of Law, but to a
multitude of others who do find a way to access this data.

Sivasubramanian M

On Tue, Apr 26, 2016 at 2:29 AM, Arsene TUNGALI (Yahoo) <
arsenebaguma at yahoo.fr> wrote:

> Dear Siva and Said,
>
> Thanks for raising this issue and for sharing your thoughts and experience
> re: free wifi, surveilliance and gps chips.
>
> Privacy is at stake here.
>
> However, i would love to hear from you if there is any positivity that can
> be found in this practice. Is there any positive effect of having GPS in
> all phones?
>
> I would love to hear from you and anyone else interested in this topic.
>
> Thanks,
> A
>
>
> ---------------------
> Arsene Tungali,
> IGC Co-coordinator
> @arsenebaguma
> +243 993810967 <+243%20993810967> (DRCongo)
> Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPhone <https://yho.com/footer0> (excuse typos
> and brievity)
>
>
> On Monday, April 25, 2016, 5:56 PM, Said Zazai <saidsemail at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
> I was in Delhi last week and I was surprised to see that Free Wifi was
> given at the cost of giving away your mobile phone number which in turns is
> registered with a government ID usually. As a tourist with no active Indian
> number, wifi was not free for me. I understand that free wifi is not a
> mandatory thing to have but a general practice in non-military or
> non-surveillance states is that there is some level of free internet at
> airports, shopping malls, coffee shops etc., which makes life a lot easier.
>
> The mandatory gps chip in phones is yet another method of monitoring
> general public. I believe the government must have a reason to monitor or
> track an individual. Imagine someone walking right behind you and make
> notes of what you buy, how much you buy them for, where you buy them, who
> you talk to and what you talk to them. As a child I would get highly
> uncomfortable when the bakery store owner would conclude that we had guests
> at home if i would buy more breads than usual and vice versa. The
> government does not need to monitor all its citizens but only criminals and
> those suspicious but in a transparent manner and within legal framework.
>
> The enemy creation or exaggeration has allowed governments in India,
> Pakistan, Afghanistan and many others i'm sure, to invest in technology
> that allows them to invade our privacy and general public sell their
> privacy for national security. For as long as their is an "enemy" there
> will be government tracking us down to save us.
>
> On Mon, Apr 25, 2016 at 7:25 PM, Sivasubramanian M <isolatedn at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>
>> The government of India today made it mandatory for all mobile phone
>> makers to install GPS chip sets in handsets from 2018
>>
>> <https://twitter.com/CNBCTV18News/status/724611179956436992>
>> https://twitter.com/CNBCTV18News/status/724611179956436992
>>
>> Is this right from a privacy point of view?  Also, while in enhances the
>> ability of Governments to track the movements of its citizens, it exposes
>> the mobile user to severe security risks, as the GPS data is accessible and
>> usable by a multitude of mobile applications, so the whereabouts of a
>> mobile phone user is easily tracked by criminals as well.
>>
>> Sivasubramanian M
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Sivasubramanian M <https://www.facebook.com/sivasubramanian.muthusamy>
>>
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>
>
> --
> Said Zazai
> P: +93.70.8064251
> E: saidsemail at gmail.com
> L: af.linkedin.com/in/saidzazai
> T: @smzazai <http://www.twitter.com/smzazai>
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>


-- 
Sivasubramanian M <https://www.facebook.com/sivasubramanian.muthusamy>
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