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Privacy Communications Technology

Using Cellphones to Track Your Kids 209

David Pogue at the New York Times wrote this week about a new, novel use for cellphones: tracking your children. Several new ventures, including ones from names like Disney, Verizon, and Sprint, will offer web-accessible locating services by pinpointing the G.P.S. signal in their commercial devices. There's also some discussion of child-specific services, like the 'Whereifone', which is more 'Star Trek communicator' than actual cell. From the article: "To pinpoint the phone's location, you call up the Web site, enter your password, click 'locate,' and presto: an icon appears on a map -- either a street map or actual satellite photo. In the photo view, you can zoom in enough to see individual buildings. These are existing satellite photos --you won't actually see your child standing there -- but this feature is still creepy and awesome. You can even watch 'bread crumbs' appear on the map as the phone moves around (cost: one talk-time minute apiece). That could be helpful if you're trying to assist someone lost on the road, or in the kinds of emergencies encountered primarily in your nightmares."
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Using Cellphones to Track Your Kids

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  • this is terrible (Score:5, Insightful)

    by skam240 ( 789197 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:41AM (#17352712)
    this kind of thing is horrible. how is a kid supposed to be a kid if they are continually being monitored by their parents? all i can think of is how bland and boring my own childhood would have been had i been burdened by such technology.

    part of growing up is spending time away from ones parents, not being continually monitored by them.
    • Re:this is terrible (Score:5, Informative)

      by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:56AM (#17352752)
      Kids are clever these days. They'll soon realize they can turn their phones off to go places parents shouldn't know about. Or let the battery drain, so they don't get blamed when they get home ("oops, I forgot to recharge it! sorry...").

      Heck, one of my friend's kid even uses an ultrasonic ringtone so his teacher at school can't tell the phone is ringing. Apparently, it's based on the fact that adults can't hear high frequencies children can. Kids are clever and have always been. If they want to do something, they will, and no amount of technology you can graft on them will change that.
      • by Toby The Economist ( 811138 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @08:25AM (#17353120)
        > Kids are clever these days. They'll soon realize they can turn their phones off to go places parents
        > shouldn't know about. Or let the battery drain, so they don't get blamed when they get home ("oops, I
        > forgot to recharge it! sorry...").

        Not if you parents are violent, physically or emotionally. You're a kid. You haven't grown up, you don't have experience, you're totally dependent on your parents in every way, you're scared to tell anyone what's going on, and you just don't know any better.

        Roughly half the people I know, maybe somewhat more, had shit parents. I NEVER want to see such people having this sort of technological hold over their children.

        It seems to me the benefits decent parents will derive from this technology is far, far outweighed by the harm and suffering that will be inflicted by it upon the kids who have awful parents.

      • by lorcha ( 464930 )
        That ringtone.

        I hate it.

        I'm 30, and you're goddamn right I can hear it.

        It sounds like that awful whine the TV makes.

        Why on earth would anybody who is capable of hearing it want to hear it?
    • It could still be fun. Just pretend you are Colonel Hogan and are trapped in a German prisoner of war camp and have to use your wits to fool the oppressive overlords and sneak out. "Hoooogaaann!"
      • How about just pretending your parents actually care about you and want to keep you safe? Sure these devices can be used to follow your children around and keep track of their every move. But you know, if you have open relationship with your kids you won't have to spy on them. I had just such a relationship with mine. I didn't have a curfew or a out of bounds limit ether. All I had to do was give them a reasonble idea of where I was and who I was with. They trusted me to do the right thing.

        Weather

        • You just hear about it more these days. World-wide media just dredges these horror stories up from remote locales and brings them to you.

          • That to, but children where much safer in the '50-'70 than in the '80 and '90's. Back then people in communities watched out for each others children. There was a civil responsibility back then that you don't find today. It used to be when someone tried to snatch a child or did; the whole community would be up and arms.

            Now no one really gives a shit. Like the case of a child that was snatched a few years ago around here. It took the cops a week to find someone who had seen the whole thing. She just

            • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

              Nah, back in the 50's people just didn't talk about it so much. There are and will always be places where people look out for each other and places where they don't. I personally think this is worthless for any sort of kidnapping - the abducter will just toss the phone at the first chance.
        • by skam240 ( 789197 )
          as a counter point, i think older kids need privacy and time out from under the parental thumb to help grow and mature. the very fact that you can track them at the push of a button ruins this for them.

          also, i might add that allot of parents would not be so benevolent as you with this service and would use it to catch their kids playing hooky occasionally or going out when they're supposed to be sleeping over at a friends house. a little deviancy isnt a bad thing for kids to engage in and if you raised the
          • All very good points. Many of which I have no answers. But then if the answers where easy, being a parent would be. This needs to be treated just as anything else. It is nothing but another tool. It can be used for good or evil.

    • by Zemran ( 3101 )
      how is a kid supposed to be a kid if they are continually being monitored by their parents?

      By turning their phone off?
      • by skam240 ( 789197 )
        i'm pretty sure any parent who tracked their kid would also be angry with the child for turning their cell phone off. this is hardly a solution.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:43AM (#17352720)
    "enter your password"
    ...yeah. So all that's standing between innocent children and the depraved preying on them is their parents ability to choose a strong password (or worse, the ability of the phone companies to do the same!)

    For once, won't someone please think of the children and put a halt to these privacy invading schemes that are massively dangerous to the very children they're marketed to protect?

    (I'll let someone else bring up the "once a generation of them have lived under constant surveillance like this, they won't fight it when the government implements the same for everyone all the time" slippery slope argument.)
    • by mabinogi ( 74033 )
      The depraved can already tell where children are by looking with their eyes.
      They don't want your child. they want a child , so the one wandering across the road right now will do fine. They don't need to look one up on the internet. (Assuming that these wild packs of child molesters are really roaming the streets in the numbers we're led to believe in the first place - I thought it was family members who were most likely to be guilty of those sorts of crimes)

      Should we gouge out peoples eyes so they can't
      • by Simon80 ( 874052 )
        Way to form a coherent argument. First you say that pedophiles don't need to stalk specific children, because they don't care which child they abuse. Then you say that pedophiles usually abuse relatives, which directly contradicts the first thing you said.
        • by FLEB ( 312391 )
          "Usually" doesn't necessarily imply "selectively". Relatives may just be closer and easier.
    • by mpe ( 36238 )
      So all that's standing between innocent children and the depraved preying on them is their parents ability to choose a strong password (or worse, the ability of the phone companies to do the same!)

      As well as anyone else able to access this data. How well is the phone company going to vet their employees?

      For once, won't someone please think of the children and put a halt to these privacy invading schemes that are massively dangerous to the very children they're marketed to protect?

      Or even attempt a rea
      • by Qzukk ( 229616 )
        Or even attempt a reasonable cost/benefit analysis.

        "Hey, we can make people pay for locating their kids for them!"

        "Have you done a cost/benefit analysis?"

        "Yeah, it'll cost the parents $1 per location, and its all pure profit for our benefit!"
  • by pembo13 ( 770295 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:45AM (#17352722) Homepage
    That there every move should, will, and is being recorded. So that when they grow up, they can each have a GPS chip implanted into their arm and feel perfectly okay with it.
    • ... the helmets, kneepads, and elbow pads. Might as well surround them in bubble wrap while we're at it.
      Add a permanent carry-along douche too, since we're raising a nation of pussies.

      [/end grinch]

    • This is a great way for parents to teach kids to be independent and learn on their own by second guessing their every move. Either that or they'll teach themselves how to wrap their phone in foil.
  • by NeuroManson ( 214835 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:49AM (#17352736) Homepage
    Boost Mobile has built in GPS systems in their current phones, and even have a game where you seek and locate friends with the same setup.

    Now depending on the age of the kids, the whole "YRO" aspect is kinda dubious. Considering we live in an age where kids under 14 have cellular phones, is it really so wrong for parents to want to know where they are, and for that matter, is it really an issue of "rights"? Sure, if it's being used for tracking adults, then yes, it is. But not in keeping track of kids (as opposed to what, implanting chips/RFID chips in them? At the least, this is the least intrusive).
    • by Toby The Economist ( 811138 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @08:32AM (#17353148)
      > Considering we live in an age where kids under 14 have cellular phones, is it really so wrong for
      > parents to want to know where they are, and for that matter, is it really an issue of "rights"? Sure,
      > if it's being used for tracking adults, then yes, it is. But not in keeping track of kids (as opposed
      > to what, implanting chips/RFID chips in them? At the least, this is the least intrusive).

      What happens when the parents are abusive?

      The kid goes to see a relative or a cop or a helper or whatever, to try and get help, to tell someone, and the parents will KNOW. And maybe beat the crap out of the kid for doing it.

      Same problem with the State.

      Say you do something or make a report which threatens a major industry. There's a LOT of money at stake. The State - or rather, a bit of it, maybe a branch which regulates this industry but has basically been compromised by that industry - starts doing things which are entirely unethical to try to suppress the report - perhaps discredit the author in whatever way they can. (Bit like with Lewinsky, where the Press Office deliberately and specifically lied about her and what happened and attempted to discredit her.)

      They won't mind a bit getting hold of his position information and using it to track what he does, which journalists he visits, where his family is.

      This technology is massively open to abuse, and humans are shit. It WILL be abused, and everyone who is in a position where they may be doing something which the State will object to will KNOW it will be abused, and it will flatly discourage them from doing what ought to be done.

      • You must be new here. On this planet, I mean.

        You do realize that cellphones can already be roughly / accurately pinpointed by the emergency services, right? You do realize that although they do this when you actually make a call, that as long as your phone is on and thus registers itself to the various cell towers, somewhere, some machine knows where you are, right?

        The State (did you mean 'The Man' without saying 'The Man'?) can already track you. Leave your phone and credit cards at home, and by all mea
    • Seriously, why the hell would you even want that? And furthermore, don't these people know that GPS doesn't actually work in buildings, or near tall buildings, or in cars unless you've got an external antenna or a soft-top?
  • I am using it... (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ifchairscouldtalk ( 1031944 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @05:51AM (#17352740)
    to track YOUR kids!
  • This kind of service has been available for years with ordinary GSM phones, no embedded GPS system required. All of the major mobile phone networks (in the UK at least) offer commercial SMS location services, that will tell you the location and an error margin, you just have to know the phone number of the device, and supposedly have the consent of its owner. It may not be as accurate as a GPS device might be, with the accuracy ranging from a few hundred meters to a few kilometers depending on terrain, but
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by timeOday ( 582209 )
      I don't see how GPS would work even as well as the cellphone signal itself. GPS cannot blast through buildings like that cell tower 300m away can, so it doesn't work indoors. It probably won't even work from inside your pocket. From my experience it won't work if the unit is turned upside-down. It also consumes fairly substantial power.
      • by Gnavpot ( 708731 )

        I don't see how GPS would work even as well as the cellphone signal itself. GPS cannot blast through buildings like that cell tower 300m away can, so it doesn't work indoors. It probably won't even work from inside your pocket. From my experience it won't work if the unit is turned upside-down. It also consumes fairly substantial power.

        Modern SirfIII based GPS receivers (which means almost every fairly new receiver available except the cheapest models) work quite well under difficult conditions.

        Glove comp

      • by Zemran ( 3101 )
        Stop putting reality in the way of a good /. arguement...

        The problems I have trying to get GPS working in the car without an external booster... takes so long to get a good lock I can be there before I get directions.
  • Now, we just need them to open the API so we can get a great multiplayer RTS going, a bit of 3d modeling and you can have your city as the battleground, and your friends the units, battle for control of the area!
  • This is evil (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Toby The Economist ( 811138 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @06:10AM (#17352786)
    I am afraid that the abuse of this new service will outweight its benefits.

    How many good parents are out there, and how many bad? how many parents who forbid their children perfectly normal and reasonable things?

    You know David Millar, the disputed champion of the most recent Tour de France? his father forbad him to do cycling, because he didn't want his son to be a cyclist. David had to sneak out at 1am in the morning to practise overnight.

    A friend of mine grew up with awful parents; they wouldn't let him have any freedom, see his friends, have friends over, have girlfriends, etc. He was badly repressed. He managed to work around it as best he could, by doing things secretly. Now he'd be watched, permanently, and have absolutely no way whatsoever of having freedom.

    Another friend of mine had a very violent father. He used to beat the crap out of her regularly. What would her fate now be if he could also now know exactly where she was at all times?

    How would you feel, thinking back to when you grew up, if your parents always knew exactly where you were?

    It's not even so much that you were going to do things which were "wrong" and now you can, but rather, you knew that you *could* and you chose not to. Now, you know that you CANNOT. That choice has been taken from you. You have no freedom.

    It's ironic. We're so concerned about our own freedom from the State, but apparently we're entirely happy for our kids to have no freedom from *US*.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by haydon4 ( 123439 )
      Indeed this could be the start of a slippery slope but there are certain ways to beat this system, such as putting the phone down and walking away.

      Any kid could simply leave the phone in his/her bedroom and still sneak out the window while any surveillant parent using only this technology would only see the location of the phone instead of acting like actual parents and personally checking up on them once in a while.

      There is a company called Digital Angel [digitalangelcorp.com] which is working on a product which is in ess
    • by Leebert ( 1694 )

      How would you feel, thinking back to when you grew up, if your parents always knew exactly where you were?


      Up to the point where I entered college, they did. In retrospect, it's probably good they were that hard-ass about it. Though it didn't necessarily keep me from getting in trouble in places they knew I was at. But that was quite a bit less trouble than I could have gotten in if I had had total freedom, that much is certain.
  • by Tim Ward ( 514198 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @06:21AM (#17352810) Homepage
    ... kids who want to be tracked.

    Any kid who doesn't want to be tracked has a number of options including:

    (1) Turn the phone off.

    (2) Leave the phone at home (one of my kids does this regularly when he's out of credit).

    (3) Leave the phone somewhere harmless, eg at an approved-of friend's house, whilst off doing something less harmless.

    Now, all these involve not having the phone with you, so the kid might also wish to:

    (4) Get another phone for real-life use, which you don't tell your parents about.

    Or, sometimes even cheaper, don't get a whole new phone:

    (5) Get another SIM for real-life use, which you don't tell your parents about.

    OK, so none of these work if the parent is phoning the child every five minutes and expecting them to actually answer - there's a limit to how often the child can "not hear" the ringtone, or claim that "I don't answer the phone whilst sitting on the loo", or whatever. But, as ever, such a family has people-issues to which a technological solution ain't gonna work anyway.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by pimpimpim ( 811140 )
      But, as ever, such a family has people-issues to which a technological solution ain't gonna work anyway>

      Yeah, technological solutions to non-technological problems just won't work as it is the wrong approach altogether. Let them fool themselves, I guess.

      There are two reasons why this tracking does more bad than good. Firstly, the parent will just follow their kid only via technology, instead of talking to the kid, learning the kid to talk about what it's doing, keeping to its boundaries, etc.

      Second

      • by radtea ( 464814 )
        the parent will just follow their kid only via technology, instead of talking to the kid, learning the kid to talk about what it's doing, keeping to its boundaries, etc.

        As well as talking to your kids and actually having real interaction with them rather than treating them as a burden (watch the "back to school" commericals at the end of summer to find out how most parents feel about their kids) you can also live in a smaller community. I live in a town of about 100,000 people, and my kids can't go anywher
    • OK, so none of these work if the parent is phoning the child every five minutes and expecting them to actually answer

      Using your option 5) get another SIM they could have another phone and forward calls from the tracked one to it. That way they can answer the calls and appear to be somewhere they are supposed to be at the same time.

      Also I propose 6) hacking
    • >But, as ever, such a family has people-issues to
      >which a technological solution ain't gonna work anyway.

      The "people-issues" may well be entirely those of
      the child.

      I know that given /.'s makeup slamming parents is fun,
      but individuals do have temperments. Some kids are
      just plain wild, with no fault of their parents.

      What do you do then? Your best. You may have to take
      measures that seem excessive to others - who are
      lucky enough to have kids with easy temperments, or
      who just don't care where their kids go
      • Well said.

        While I don't have experience with teenagers yet (my kids are 5 and under), I do realize that kids will go through different phases, some of which present big risks. A parent has to do what it takes to get through the challenging or risky phases. At some point, most kids will grow out of whatever problems they are having. Obviously (I hope) though, a parent has to try to preserve as much mutual respect, trust, and love as possible.

    • My little brother (little in the birth-order sense... he's 26 years old) has the worst sense of direction. Ever. After he got his driver's license, he routinely got horribly lost. As in, not even close to his intended destination.

      The problem was, he was so lost and so clueless, he couldn't really explain to anybody where he actually was, or worse, he would think he was somewhere and be wrong. In-car GPS wasn't very common back then, and I doubt that would have helped anyway. If he couldn't figure out t
  • Big Momma (Score:3, Funny)

    by El_Muerte_TDS ( 592157 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @06:50AM (#17352900) Homepage
    ... is watching?
  • Easy to Bypass (Score:2, Informative)

    by Killer Eye ( 3711 )
    If a kid doesn't want to be tracked, he won't be. Star Trek has only covered this about 12 times by now...if Security can simply ask the Computer where you are, take off your communicator and leave it wherever you're "supposed" to be (like confined to quarters). A kid may do one better by removing the battery.

    Still, this is a disturbing trend. What good can come from it? Paranoid parents are paying extra for this technology to avoid potential troubles that are, let's face it, unlikely. Meanwhile, the k
    • > If a kid doesn't want to be tracked, he won't be. Star Trek has only covered this about 12 times by
      > now...if Security can simply ask the Computer where you are, take off your communicator and leave it
      > wherever you're "supposed" to be (like confined to quarters). A kid may do one better by removing the
      > battery.

      Not if your parents are abusive and will beat the crap out of you for turning your phone off.

      These are kids - they don't have the experience, strength of character, or economic indepen
  • Brand new market springs to light, really, it's the latest fad to have a tiny tin foil hat on your cellphone.
    • by Gnavpot ( 708731 )

      Brand new market springs to light, really, it's the latest fad to have a tiny tin foil hat on your cellphone.

      More real than you think.

      Tracking the GPS in a cell phone is not a new thing. 1 year ago I was searching for a good 2-way tracking solution for cell phones (like www.mologogo.com). I stumbled over several employee-tracking solutions which seemed to offer exactly what is described in the summary (no, I did not RTFA). I also stumbled over some descriptions of how to circumvent the surveillance. Wrapp


  • i-Kids = GSM phone + GPS
    (but easy for kids' use)

    It would have been nice if these
    puppies were open spec'd, so that
    - like Amateur Radio's APRS -
    anyone could receive the GPS
    location "blips" (ie, Lat/Long data)
    ie, without needing to pay Vodaphone
    for a specialized service.

    Anybodu up for hacking this phone's
    GPS data comms protocol, eg, to
    free it from a single-source of
    GSM service?
  • Lost kids (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Elentari ( 1037226 )
    "That could be helpful if you're trying to assist someone lost on the road"

    You're able to assist them, so you must be in contact with them. Therefore, you can call them and give them directions, as opposed to tracking them in this rather sinister fashion.

    If, as a parent, you find you're rarely aware of where your child is, maybe you should start to question your relationship with them. As they're evidently unable to trust you with their whereabouts, following them around isn't going to help you get alon

  • by gelfling ( 6534 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @07:55AM (#17353046) Homepage Journal
    If you give a phone tracking device to your.....what? 10 year old? Then that will allow to do.....what precisely? Compare that with your 16-17-18 year old whose movements you will track and that will allow.....what again? Seems to me if you have a kid who refuses to callback or answer their phone you've lost either way. And if you want to use this as a passive device to track them in spite of their own behavior, well, let's just say I'm glad I don't have to sit down with your family at dinner.

    See, let's just set aside the squishy implications of whether you think this is an ethical thing to do. That's your decision to make, not mine. Instead, as a practical matter, if your kid tells you they're at "A's" house and you doublecheck and discover they're not, then what do you do? And below a certain age if your kid is out of your sight and lying to you about it, then you have bigger problems than technology can solve, unless of course you plan on subjecting your kids to drug tests and lie detector tests the moment you drag them home. On the other hand, if your kid is almost 18, then the same behavior really says more about you as a parent and maybe your anal retentive, passive aggressive borderline paranoid martyr complex than it does about your kids.

    Let's just say that as a parent of teenagers who routinely do not like to be interrupted when they are doing exactly what they told me they were going to do, that whether I can verify where they are at all times will just make them that much less eager to talk to me and answer their phone. As I've said many many times;

    Sometimes the greatest revenge you can wreak on a control freak is to actually give them total control. It will piss them off and burn them out faster than resistance.
    • Instead, as a practical matter, if your kid tells you they're at "A's" house and you doublecheck and discover they're not, then what do you do?

      How about talk to him about it to find out why he was lying, then work out a better solution to whatever problem the kid was trying to solve?

      I understand that lots of slashdotters are teenagers who (as nearly all teenagers do) resent their parents' attempts to keep them out of trouble, but I find yours a very funny comment from a parent.

      Personally, I can see this sort of service as being very useful. Not to spy on my kids, but to give them greater freedom with less hassle for me and for them. My kid

  • ... absolutely definitively, that the enquirer on the web site really is the person authorised to know where this particular child is located?

    What with all the insecurities, such as reporting key loggers, to which computer systems are prone I might have, in a moment of total madness, installed such a system for keeping tabs on my son, but would have never ever even dreamt of setting up this sort of thing on my daughter.

    In the context of child protection this is technology gone totally mad.

    Have the perps. of
  • Oh what a boon it will be for sexual predators too... who can now hack into a system and track their prey.

    The only assurance that information will not be abused is to not collect it or allow it to be collected in the first place. Just because something CAN be done doesn't necessarily mean it should be done. The crisis of the 21st century will be privacy vs safety, because they are absolutely diametrically opposed to each other.

    Alas, the masses will keep on chanting "if you have nothing to hide"...
  • If you stash one of these phones behind the dash with a constant 12V supply to the charger, you can track your unwitting spouse. Combine that with your internet connected smart phone and you've got a portable homing device system without having to bother Q.

    Better make sure my wife doesn't find out about these things. :)

  • by Erwos ( 553607 ) on Sunday December 24, 2006 @09:24AM (#17353342)
    Reading these comments, you'd think these kids circumventing their GPS tracking are straight out of some orbiting Battle School (Ender's game ref!), and not the standard, mind-numbing public schools that most people subject their kids to. Never mind that _parents_ are being cast as folks with IQs lower than your standard Fox sitcom character's. I attribute this to many Slashdotters feeling that they were much smarter than their foolish parents about computers, so, obviously, said Slashdotters were much smarter about EVERYTHING.

    Will a few kids be smart enough to circumvent this, and the parents too dumb to notice? Yes. Clearly, it is not a solution for every case. But most of these supposed circumvention techniques (leave phone somewhere else, turn it off, pay someone to answer it, whatever) rely on parents being completely stupid, and not having some sort of verification method. I'm not sure if I think the entire concept of GPS tracking your kids is great (I'd like them to be able to provide their positions with their own free will via a button push), but it's not nearly as worthless and bankrupt as some Slashdotters have been ranting.

    It's disturbing as all hell to see the kind of parenting mantra that's being espoused on here: "you'll never be able to stop your kid from seeing the real world, so let them run wild at 13!" I guess it's a relief that your average Slashdotter probably won't ever have kids anyways.
  • What scares me more than the eagerness of the powers-that-be to use technology to further diminish our privacy is the willingness of the common man to use these same technologies to diminish our privacy of his own volition under the guise of love.
    • I think I need to remind you of something. The idea that your children have a right to privacy is a myth. While your children are under the age of 18 and living under your roof they have no right to privacy. You as a parent have the right to say where your child goes, who your child is with, and what your child does at all times. As a parent I have the right to search my child room, possessions, and person any time I feel is necessary.

      And contrary to popular myth no court has ever taken this right aw

      • Sure, you can do this. If you do it constantly, you're an idiot and will lose the kid at 18 - basically, you need to give the kid his own space as he grows up and allow him to make his own mistakes or else he will never grow up. Either that, or he'll do his growing up after 18 when he tells you to go to hell and never talk to him again.
  • because I refuse to buy a child a cell phone. Why should I spend $50 a month just so my kid can have an expensive toy that they will lose, break or have stolen? I finally succumbed to buying my 14 year old a cell phone. All of his friends have had them for years (so why does he need one, unless he is wandering off without his friends). It used to be easier to say no, because I didn't have or need a cell phone either. But then my silly company went and bought me one, so it became harder to tell my stepson he
  • ...TruePosition [trueposition.com]. I used to work there a few years ago. One of the managers in IT was a total dick (which is why I left) but the product of the company is pretty amazing stuff.
  • It's dangerous to assume that any web-based service is secure. As a parent, I'm really unhappy about the idea of random strangers being able to track my children at all times. I don't think the small amount of extra security I would feel from being able to track them myself is worth that kind of risk.

  • by DerekLyons ( 302214 ) <fairwater@gGIRAF ... minus herbivore> on Sunday December 24, 2006 @11:33AM (#17353948) Homepage
    I love the blatant hypocrisy shown in the replies to date. The Slashdot Hivemind is always getting all wound up about how parents are responsible for their children, etc... etc... But when a tool that can be useful to that end is proposed... It's instantly the worst child rearing tool since the Iron Maiden.
    • by SeaFox ( 739806 )

      I love the blatant hypocrisy shown in the replies to date. The Slashdot Hivemind is always getting all wound up about how parents are responsible for their children, etc... etc...

      The idea to be more responsible in the raising of your children. Teaching them to make better decisions on their own, so you don't have to watch them continuously. What does having your children tracked all the time teach them? Behave because I'm watching, not because it's normal? Don't think about what you're getting involved in b

  • Good Idea (Score:2, Insightful)

    by charliebear ( 887653 )
    Freedom is great for adults, not for kids. As a parent, part of your job in raising kids is to keep them safe, and to keep them in line. A cell phone with GPS fits into my scheme of "Trust, but Verify" When the kid shows enough maturity, etc. to get a little more freedom, give them the benefit of the doubt, let them stay out later, let them stay over at a friends, but have something like this to verify they are where they SAY they are, if you are suspicious. You can't follow the kid around 24/7, and yo
    • You can also do neat stuff like use the info to pick her up if her car malfunctions (and send a wrecker to get it). If she gets lost, she can call you for directions. This tech has plenty of non-Gestapo uses.

Never tell people how to do things. Tell them WHAT to do and they will surprise you with their ingenuity. -- Gen. George S. Patton, Jr.

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