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Lost? Hiding? Your Cellphone Is Keeping Tabs (tracking your location)
NY Times ^ | Dec. 21, 2003 | AMY HARMON

Posted on 12/20/2003 9:54:00 PM PST by FairOpinion

On the train returning to Armonk, N.Y., from a recent shopping trip in Manhattan with her friends, Britney Lutz, 15, had the odd sensation that her father was watching her.

He very well could have been. Ms. Lutz's father, Kerry, recently equipped his daughters with cellular phones that let him see where they are on a computer map at any given moment. Earlier that day, he had tracked Britney as she arrived in Grand Central Terminal. Later, calling up the map on his own cellphone screen, he noticed she was in SoHo.

Mr. Lutz did not happen to be checking when Britney developed pangs of guilt for taking a train home later than she was supposed to, but the system worked just as he had hoped: she volunteered the information that evening.

"Before, they might not have told me the truth, but now I know they're going to," said Mr. Lutz, 46, a lawyer who has been particularly protective of Britney and her sister, Chelsea, 17, since his wife died several years ago. "They know I care. And they know I'm watching."

Driven by worries about safety, the need for accountability, and perhaps a certain "I Spy" impulse, families and employers are adopting surveillance technology once used mostly to track soldiers and prisoners. New electronic services with names like uLocate and Wherify Wireless make a very personal piece of information for cellphone users — physical location — harder to mask.

But privacy advocates say the lack of legal clarity about who can gain access to location information poses a serious risk. And some users say the technology threatens an everyday autonomy that is largely taken for granted. The devices, they say, promote the scrutiny of small decisions — where to have lunch, when to take a break, how fast to drive — rather than general accountability.

"It's like a weird thought I get sometimes, like `he definitely knows where I am right now, and he's looking to see if I'm somewhere he might not approve of,' " said Britney Lutz. "I wonder what it will be like when I start to drive."

Still, personal location devices are beginning to catch on, largely because cellular phones are increasingly coming with a built-in tether. A federal mandate that wireless carriers be able to locate callers who dial 911 automatically by late 2005 means that millions of phones already keep track of their owners' whereabouts. Analysts predict that as many as 42 million Americans will be using some form of "location-aware" technology in 2005.

Wireless companies and start-up firms are weaving the satellite system known as G.P.S., or Global Positioning System, which was begun by the United States military in the 1970's, into the cellular phone network and the Internet to sell products and services that provide location information.

After fixing an individual's location relative to a network of G.P.S. satellites orbiting 12,000 miles above the earth — or, more crudely, by the time it takes signals to bounce off nearby cell towers — personal locator services transmit the constantly updated information to a central database, where customers can retrieve it through the Internet, telephone or pager.

Until recently, one of the main civilian uses of G.P.S. was in devices issued by the criminal justice system to track offenders as a condition of their parole or probation. The new generation of tracking devices has moved well beyond that population and now takes many forms, from plastic bracelets that can be locked onto children to small boxes with tiny antennae that can be placed unobtrusively in cars.

"We are moving into a world where your location is going to be known at all times by some electronic device," said Larry Smarr, director of the California Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology. "It's inevitable. So we should be talking about its consequences before it's too late."

Some of those consequences have not been spelled out. Will federal investigators be allowed to retrieve information on your recent whereabouts from a private service like uLocate, or your cellular carrier? Can the local Starbucks store send advertisements to your phone when it knows you are nearby, without your explicit permission?

Because the new electronic surveillance services are still in their infancy, there are few answers, but the debate over the boundaries of privacy in a more transparent world is already taking shape. Teenagers in particular tend to be skeptical of the new technology's value.

"Cellphones would lose their appeal if they became tracking devices," said Nate Bingham, 16, of Seattle. "I think if your parents really care that much they should just put a leash on you."

Mr. Bingham's parents use an AT&T service called Find Friend that lets them see his general location when his cellphone is on, based on the company's nearest cellular tower. He said his mother had at times asked him where he was and then used the service to see if he was telling the truth. He admits to turning the phone off occasionally when he doesn't want to be found.

That won't work in the Pratt household, in Garden City, N.Y., where Jason, 13, and Ashley, 11, were given new Nextel cellphones on the condition that they be kept on at all times. With uLocate, Tom Pratt set up his account on the company's Web site to establish a "geofence" around his home and his children's school. Every time the kids leave a 400-foot radius of either place, he gets an automatic e-mail alert: "Ashley has exited Home at 08:18 AM," read a typical message last week.

Jason Pratt said there were advantages to being watched. He no longer has to call his mother to let her know where he is. Instead, she can press a "locate" button on her phone and see for herself. So long as Jason's phone is running the uLocate software, it transmits his location information every two minutes. Jason's 17-year-old brother, Matthew, however, kept his older cellphone — even though it had poor reception — rather than submit to the new deal.

Howard Boyle, president of a fire sprinkler installation company in Woodside, N.Y., presented his employees with no such choice. The five workers who have been given company phones with the G.P.S. feature have not been told that Mr. Boyle can find out if they have arrived at a work site, and whether they are walking around in it or sitting still.

"They don't need to know," said Mr. Boyle, who hopes the service will help him determine the truth when clients claim they are being overbilled for the time his employees spent at their location. "I can call them and say, `Where are you now?' while I'm looking at the screen and knowing exactly where they are, just to make sure they're not telling me they're somewhere else."

But it is not just the unnerving effect of uncovering small lies that has some users of the technology worried. Like caller I.D., location devices lift the curtain on a zone of privacy that many Americans value, even if they rarely have anything serious to hide.

"Think back to when you were a teenager and your mom or dad said, `I don't want you to do this,' and you said, `yeah, yeah, yeah,' because you knew you could do it and they wouldn't know," said Graham Clarke, president of National Scientific, which makes several G.P.S. tracking devices. "Those days are gone now, because they actually can know."

Mr. Clarke recently installed a tracking device called Followit in the Jeep Wrangler of his 17-year-old son, Gordon. It alerts him if Gordon has exceeded 60 m.p.h. or traveled beyond preset boundaries.

Advocates of location-aware technology insist that its safety benefits — like locating a 911 caller or a stolen car — outweigh the privacy issues.

And for Donna Phillips, 66, whose husband, Hubie, has Alzheimer's disease, the ability to lock a G.P.S.-enabled bracelet from Wherify Wireless around Mr. Phillips's fanny pack when he goes out has meant an end to panicked searches when he fails to come home. Now her granddaughter can help her find her husband on the Wherify Wireless Web site, which displays the location information transmitted from the bracelet when an authorized user logs on.

About two weeks ago, Mr. Phillips, 90, boarded a bus near his home in Rancho Park, Calif., and traveled several miles before switching to another bus. Because he was moving too fast for his wife to catch up, she called the police, who were able to pinpoint his location through the Wherify Wireless service to pick him up.

Critics of the new technology do not dispute its usefulness, but worry that it will become ubiquitous before legal guidelines are established.

Last year, the Federal Communications Commission turned down a request from the cellular phone industry's association and privacy groups for guidance on such matters. For the moment, the questions of trust and tracking are being raised largely in the sphere of family and personal relationships, rather than in the public arenas of government and business.

Jerold Surdahl, 40, an administrator in a building management office in Centerville, Ohio, said he started using the uLocate service to communicate with colleagues. Now, he is intrigued by the possibility of stashing a location-tracking phone in the trunk of his wife's car.

"I'm not expecting or hoping or wanting to find something, but I would just like to explore the possibilities," Mr. Surdahl said. "I'd tell her about it later."


TOPICS: Extended News; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: gps; privacy
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Another technology that can be used for protection, or for intruding into people's privacy.

Then there is also RFID...

UPS ramps up supply chain RFID to meet Wal-Mart, Defense plans

More and more it will be true: "you can run, but you can't hide" and "Big Brother is watching you" -- literally.

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1044289/posts

1 posted on 12/20/2003 9:54:00 PM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
Big Brother! And people will fall for it in the name of "safety" or "security".
2 posted on 12/20/2003 10:06:43 PM PST by NotJustAnotherPrettyFace
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To: FairOpinion
Big Brother will be second in line to watch you. Your employer will monitor your every move first.
3 posted on 12/20/2003 10:52:46 PM PST by umgud (gov't has more money than it needs, but never as much as it wants)
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To: FairOpinion
"I'm not expecting or hoping or wanting to find something, but I would just like to explore the possibilities," Mr. Surdahl said. "I'd tell her about it later."

Imagine the possibilites! < gag >

4 posted on 12/20/2003 10:54:44 PM PST by stands2reason
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To: umgud
"Your employer will monitor your every move first."

===

What do you mean "will". They already have software in most places, which tracks every key stroke.

But the employer watching you, while you are at work, is one thing, government watching you in your personal life, where you go, what you do is something very different.
5 posted on 12/20/2003 10:56:31 PM PST by FairOpinion
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To: FairOpinion
If someone was monitoring mine they would probably call 911 to check my pulse.
6 posted on 12/20/2003 11:11:07 PM PST by Old Professer
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To: Travis McGee
I read about this in some book.. the title eludes me. ;-)
7 posted on 12/20/2003 11:14:38 PM PST by humblegunner
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To: FairOpinion
If you want to keep a step ahead of teenagers who might cut class....... I think the tracking device should not be easily left behind in a locker.

I would be interested this on my phone because if I break down on the highway or fall from my horse in the woods, I would sure love to be able to be located.

But then.... I see advantages where others see big brother.
8 posted on 12/20/2003 11:17:36 PM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: FairOpinion
First ... what parent tells their kids they are spying on them

Whenever I got caught .. my mom always told me it was a little birdy that told her ... years later I found out she was getting the scoop on me from other parents when she went to the grocery store

9 posted on 12/20/2003 11:20:52 PM PST by Mo1 (House Work, If you do it right , will kill you!)
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To: FairOpinion
The property of ones person is fundamental.

Can the same be said about one being secure in the property of ones privacy? I say yes.
10 posted on 12/20/2003 11:30:37 PM PST by longtermmemmory (Vote!)
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To: HairOfTheDog
As most technologies, they can be used for good, but also to invade people's privacy.

Do you know about the black boxes in new cars, which monitor the speed, etc. of the car, and most people aren't even aware of?

http://www.techtv.com/news/print/0,23102,3391730,00.html

Is There a Black Box in Your Car?

Debate rages on whether devices are lifesavers or privacy invaders.

EDRs record the following data:


Vehicle speed (five seconds before impact)
Engine speed (five seconds before impact)
Brake status (five seconds before impact)
Throttle position (five seconds before impact)
State of driver's seat belt switch (On/Off)
Passenger's airbag (On/Off)
SIR Warning Lamp status (On/Off)
Time from vehicle impact to airbag deployment
Ignition cycle count at event time
Ignition cycle count at investigation
Maximum velocity for near-deployment event
Velocity vs. time for frontal airbag deployment event
Time from vehicle impact to time of maximum velocity
Time between near-deploy and deploy event (if within five seconds)

Using this data, insurance agents and police officers can reconstruct the events leading up to a crash.


Black boxes have been in all GM cars since 1999 and in many other makes and models since 1996. (See the links below to see if your car comes standard with one.)

11 posted on 12/20/2003 11:44:41 PM PST by FairOpinion
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To: HairOfTheDog
Every cell phone has a tracking mechanism, Hair. This appears to be one the "public" can access.
12 posted on 12/20/2003 11:47:55 PM PST by Professional Engineer (pssst Hey Kid, wanna be a Rocket Scientist?)
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To: Professional Engineer
With the help of the authorities they can MAYBE triangulate a signal if there is more than one tower in range... Not often a good signal where I ride, and I wonder if this would be better or no better.

Something struck me as handy about ecurbh or my dad being able to locate me if I am late getting back from a ride. I think it is notable in that it only works if the phone is ~on~ and carried. It is, then, even if being tracked, being tracked by a cooperative carrier.

Technology in itself is not threatening to me... This is a cool thing to be able to do.... now that we ~can~ do it we can argue about who and when and how.
13 posted on 12/20/2003 11:54:30 PM PST by HairOfTheDog
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To: FairOpinion
I remember when a cell phone was a status symbol and only the more successful had one. Now it's vogue and cool not to have a cell phone leash.....
14 posted on 12/21/2003 12:07:56 AM PST by Joe Hadenuf (I failed anger management class, they decided to give me a passing grade anyway)
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To: Professional Engineer
I noticed when Bush made that trip to Baghdad, the passengers on Air Force One were instructed to take the batteries off their cell phones.
15 posted on 12/21/2003 12:13:05 AM PST by The Westerner
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To: humblegunner
Yep. Big Brother is watching YOU!
16 posted on 12/21/2003 12:23:53 AM PST by Travis McGee (----- www.EnemiesForeignAndDomestic.com -----)
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To: FairOpinion
Critics of the new technology do not dispute its usefulness, but worry that it will become ubiquitous before legal guidelines are established.

You know, this is a problem. We are moving forward faster than our ability to do anything about it. Faster than our current debate system can sort through it.

17 posted on 12/21/2003 12:26:05 AM PST by Prodigal Son
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To: FairOpinion
Don't worry - pre paid cell phones and credit cards will be the rage in 2004 with no tracking !
18 posted on 12/21/2003 12:31:07 AM PST by america-rules (It's US or THEM so what part don't you understand ?)
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To: Mo1
Yes! Those of us who grew up in small towns know what it is like to be monitored at all times!
19 posted on 12/21/2003 12:45:07 AM PST by SubMareener
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To: HairOfTheDog
As long as the battery is in the phone, any phone, it is "on" for signal tracking purposes.
20 posted on 12/21/2003 1:11:19 AM PST by Professional Engineer (pssst Hey Kid, wanna be a Rocket Scientist?)
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