Track People Using Their Mobile Phones 257
Richard W.M. Jones writes "A couple of new services have been rolled out in the UK recently which allow you to track people when they have their mobile phones turned on. Mapminder states 'It's important to know where your loved ones are for your own peace of mind'. 192.com asks 'Do you want to know where your children are?'. Of course the police have been able to do this for a long time, and evidence from mobile phone positions has been used in high-profile court cases in the UK. Silicon.com has an article."
the moral is (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:the moral is (Score:5, Insightful)
A while ago, before 9/11 I was sitting in a bizare meeting with a bunch of wireless execs who were breathlessly telling us how great their new location finder service was going to be. They could send you adverts targetted at people in a particular location.
I was rather unpopular when I asked if the customers would buy a product if the chief benefit was going to be to enable a new kind of spam. "Perhaps they don't get the choice"
I was even more unpopular when I pointed out that the regulators in Europe would blast this type of thing on privacy grounds. "Oh the regulators tend to be more sensible than the general public".
I pointed out that my cousin, one of those regulators has survived two assasination attempts and may have an opinion about a technology that gives away his position. In Europe privacy is not something that you muck arround with.
Today the risk of this type of scheme would be obvious even to a US legislator. Now right to life will be able to stalk doctors who provide abortions by telephone, Saddam loyalists will be able to stalk senior Republicans and Al Qaeda will be able to stalk everyone.
So they are finally working out socially acceptable ways to package up the same technology. Was it really necessary to have the dotCOM bust before some folk got a clue?
Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:3, Informative)
...which is why reporters on Air Force One [cnn.com] were required to remove the batteries from their cell phones on the President's Thanksgiving Day trip to Iraq.
They know how to control it for themselves -- why should they care about the privacy of i
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:3, Funny)
or maybe Bush did not actually go to Iraq. Like the 1960s moon mission, the Air Force just flew Bush and these gullible reporters around in circles before landing at a fake base in an allied country somewhere. The reporters were only on the ground for three hours. How would they know where they actually landed without cell phones or GPS?
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
And it's impossible for Bush to have been in Iraq. The sand would not support the weight of his aircraft, and would have disappeared under the surface of the desert.
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
Re:Stalking senior Republicans... (Score:2)
I don't believe that happened, but I would not be surprised if a conspiracy theory of exactly that type started to spread through the Internet.
If a President lands in I
Re:the moral is (Score:5, Insightful)
No, you can just "prove" that your phone wasn't at the crime scene.
Re:the moral is (Score:3, Funny)
Re:the moral is (Score:2)
Actually no. In the case I heard about (a notorious case involving a black school child murdered in South London in an apparently racially motivated killing) the phones were not called. I understand that mobile phone positioning information is now
Re:the moral is (Score:5, Informative)
1. was the sad case of Daminola Taylor [bbc.co.uk], a 10 year old schoolboy, murdered. It was expcted a gang of only slightly older kids killed him, but this suspected group 'got off' because their mobile phones were traced to a distance too far away from the murder scene to be credible. The ganag was mainly Afro-Carribean (Daminola Taylor was Nigerian, the racial aspect centered around Afro-Carribean vs. African violence, a serious friction point in London's black community).
2. The infamous racist killing in SOuth London was that of Stephen Lawrence [official-documents.co.uk] (late teens IIRC) whose alleged attackers (racist white gang) 'got off' on technical details.
Both were killings and in both cases the attacters were not convicted.
Re:the moral is (Score:2)
: Rich.
Re:the moral is (Score:2)
Re:the moral is (Score:4, Interesting)
Two pieces of phone evidence in the Soham case:
1. It disproves the position of someone who's part of an alibi.
2. It gives the rough location of a girl just before her phone dropped off the network.
So on its own it's not 100% conclusive, but taken with eyewitness accounts and forensic evidence, it can certainly back up evidence quite considerably.
Re:the moral is (Score:2)
(Disclaimers: this is a humorous thread of posting, a joke; all homicidal maniacs reading this should consider suicide as a far superior alternative to homicide. Also, M
Track anyone... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Track anyone... (Score:2)
Amazing how the truth comes out (Score:5, Interesting)
Now it's commercial a scant 3 years later. Who'd have guessed.
Re:Amazing how the truth comes out (Score:2)
Location Based Services (LBS) have been touted for years now as the next big thing in the Geospatial arena.
Re:Amazing how the truth comes out (Score:3, Informative)
In built up areas like city blocks, the providers use what are known as 'micro-cells' that are attached to the side of buildings or on lamp posts because a simple tower is not enough to reach all of the blind spots created by buildings.
In A
Double-edged sword. (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Double-edged sword. (Score:2)
Re:Double-edged sword. (Score:3, Funny)
The Glove Doesn't Fit, See! (Score:2)
BTW, this post is assuming that the phone company is keeping accurate records of every place your phone visits. Having the ability to track phones does not mean that telcos are tracking every phone at the moment.
Second use of the same 'the Office' quote (Score:2)
Gareth: "What if that killed someone?" Tim: "Well then... they'll think you're the murderer, it's got your name on it" Gareth: "Why would a murderer put his name on a murder weapon?" Tim: "To stop people borrowing it"
Great for me... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Great for me... (Score:2)
Also consider that perhaps the embarrising strib club workers won't teach you how to spell as well as your school.
Re:Great for me... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Great for me... (Score:5, Funny)
Easy service in the UK (Score:5, Funny)
Such a service has existed for a long time. It's
Mom: [dialing little James] Jimmy, where are you?
Little James: [Stepping out of the arcade] I'm at the school library
Of course, the accuracy of the information wasn't always guaranteed
Cell Phone tracking covered before on /. (Score:5, Informative)
Doubled edged? (Score:5, Funny)
No, I'm not a deviant, I'm just making a point.
Re:Doubled edged? (Score:3, Funny)
With a nick like "mikeophile", I'm not so sure.....
Virgin Mobile have kept records... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Virgin Mobile have kept records... (Score:2)
Other Good things: Resturant reservations and accurate wait times. The est. number of people in a club to avoid breaking fire code. The popularity of attractions and events in a city. And, a positive way for street cops to tell who is in the area, or who saw a crime.
Re:Virgin Mobile have kept records... (Score:3, Informative)
Even better, combine information from all Virgin point of sales in the UK to obtain much more details
8:21 - Virgin Mobile phone turned on in Kensington
9:55 - Virgin Mobile customer applies for a Virgin credit card
10:34 - Virgin Mobile customer orders a Virgin Cola near the Virgin V2 music store in Kensington
11:03 - Virgin Mobile customer goes for Virgin Vodka instead. Cola sucks.
12:45 - Virgin Mobile custome
Re:Virgin Mobile have kept records... (Score:5, Funny)
9:55 - Virgin Mobile customer applies for a Virgin credit card
10:34 - Virgin Mobile customer orders a Virgin Cola near the Virgin V2 music store in Kensington
11:03 - Virgin Mobile customer goes for Virgin Vodka instead. Cola sucks.
12:45 - Virgin Mobile customer boards Virgin train, westbound
Which would then more likely go:
13:45 - Virgin Mobile customer still on Virgin train, stationary
14:45 - Virgin Mobile customer getting slightly fed up with Virgin train, stationary
15:45 - Virgin Mobile customer homicidal on Virgin train, eastbound (slowly)
16:45 - Virgin Mobile customer still on Virgin train, texting death threat to Richard Branson
Best wishes,
Mike.
Re:Virgin Mobile have kept records... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is going to get interesting (Score:2)
Not just the UK. (Score:2)
This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:5, Interesting)
That was about 10 years ago, but certainly shows how cell-phone signal triangulation can save lives.
Re:This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:5, Interesting)
That should be his choice. All he is saying (and he is correct, of course) is that cell phone triangulation can save lives.
There's no reason for them to know where you are unless you want them to.
He wants them to.
Cell phone companies already know roughly which zone your cell-phone is in (if it is turned on). And there are laws to protect privacy, etc.
If you don't want the cell company to know where you are, turn your phone off.
Of course this implies (Score:2, Insightful)
I have also stopped at numerous accidents (I'm a doc) in rural vermont and norther NY on trips, and had no clue where I am, talking to a state trooper who was 100mi away at the time (who also didn't know any of the landmarks I was near) and having the phone Co be able to locate me would have made it much easier...
As for carrying a G
Re:This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:2)
Re:This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:2)
How do I know? I am paid to make a GIS of the GPS.
Re:This can save lives too, you know.... (Score:2)
Speaking both as someone who's waited for ambulances to show up while I was bleeding and as a former first aid volunteer, I must say that if they don't really know where the ambulance has to get to, its better not to send it.
Imagine if they had sent it to say, the other side of the mountain (or whatever) and it then had to backtrack for 45 minutes once the
tired of such arguments (Score:5, Insightful)
I think being able to track one's own location via GPS or cell phones is really swell. But when the police or employers can do it as a matter of course, then it fundamentally changes the kind of society we have.
The best of both worlds (Score:3, Insightful)
If you want to be tracked, it's a feature. If you don't, you're not having your privacy violated.
Of course... the main issue is with whether or not you can tell if it's actually disabled. And of course police monitoring warrants apply regardless (same as they do with a home phone wiretap, I would assume?).
Re:The best of both worlds (Score:3, Insightful)
In any case, I'm not saying that this should or shouldn't be done. I'm just saying that the argument "it saves lives" is, by itself, a bad one. Lots of policies "save lives" but that doesn't make them good ideas.
Re:The best of both worlds (Score:2)
I'd would say however, that if it's not disabled in cellphones, then it should be unavailable to the general public anyways, and for that matter the authorities without proper warrants, etc.
I would also say, however, if somebody has an emergency and authorizes over-phone the use of cellular tracking, then it
What is this guy hiding? (Score:2)
And what reasons do you have for not wanting the police to have the ability to locate you, hmmmm?
What about people who really don't want it? (Score:2)
Even better, what if I could find and track Justin Timberlake?
Scary stuff here.
Re:What about people who really don't want it? (Score:2)
if you're worried about it (Score:5, Interesting)
If you don't, including for police and other emergency services, you've still got an opt-out: Take out the battery. This is not as permanent as leaving it at home, and gives you privacy. But be sure to be someplace you don't mind having listed as your last known location first.
Me, i'm pretty comfortable having my location known, and feel oke about this being part of the cellphone i'm shopping for lately. i've seen too many people go missing in Boston to really like the idea of being vanished from the map. I always swore that the child-leashes in malls were a bad idea, too, until a friend's kid got snatched. They closed the mall and found the guy- in less than five minutes he'd changed the kid's clothes and dyed his hair (which was still wet with the dye.) Now i'm not so sure i don't like the leashes, you know?
sol
Re:if you're worried about it (Score:3, Funny)
OT: Re:if you're worried about it (Score:3, Insightful)
Which mall? When? Which police department handled the case?
Just curious, because this has the ring of one of the older urban legends, so if you have a hard cite for when and where it happened, I'd be truly grateful (and might be able to win some money pl
she was in my Kenpo class (Score:3, Interesting)
There have actually been
Re:if you're worried about it (Score:4, Informative)
Really? I'm sure snopes would like names and dates for this event [snopes.com].
see my post to the other reply. (Score:2)
sol
Re:if you're worried about it (Score:2, Funny)
Now that's just being silly. If you really want to keep your kids safe, you shouldn't take them to the mall in the first place. Instead, you should lock them in their rooms until they're 18 -- and sin
Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:5, Informative)
My company develops LBS SMS products. It's a fun market.
Re:Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:3, Insightful)
SMS and MMS are old school. We use the new gaydar profile for Bluetooth.
Along the other line of your comment, I don't see gay people putting burdens on child welfare and education systems like the equally-frequent, over-horny straight people. How can conservatives simultaneously whine about gay people being more promiscuous than straights and the prevalence of teenage pregnencies and welfare moms?
Pe
Re:Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:2, Insightful)
A straight guy would do the same (speaking for myself) if he could convince attractive women to go along for the ride, so to speak.
The Bluetooth thing is cool, but won't help you find company
Re:Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:2)
And it's that same advancing tech that allows for advances in food production, health, etc, which is why society didn't collapse from overpopulation as was the hot prediction in the 70s.
So yes, 12 billion minds are better than 6.
--
Government and taxes (Score:2)
- Demonstration: the countries with the highest birth rates (and lowest death rates) also enjoy the highest standard of living. China, our favourite bogeyman, is today's fastest growing economy. Better counter examples would be Russia, with a collapsing population and parts of Africa, decimated by AIDS. Not particularly pleasant scenes.
- Optimism
Re:Yeah, yeah, yeah (Score:2)
There's a word for that. It starts with S-T-A-L-K...
Carriers have been using Triangulation for a while (Score:5, Informative)
The easiest and simplest method for most carriers to comply with E911 is using triangulation. Indeed, bellsouth even posted a nice article about the various ways location can be obtained for cell phone users [bellsouth.com].
Obviously, with a GPS stuck in the phone itself this becomes really trivial, but even with normal phones you can use a variety of techniques, like Time Difference Of Arrival (TDOA) and Angle Of Arrival (AOA) and even Enhanced Observed Time Difference (EOTD) to triangulate the location of a wireless caller.
The carriers are already using this technology across the US, and many phones are now available with GPS integrated.
Welcome to the future.
Re:Carriers have been using Triangulation for a wh (Score:2, Interesting)
With the narrow channel bandwidths, TDOA is not going to work very well. But if you can get the phone to simultaneously transmit on 2 widely separated frequencies (maybe 1 on each end of the allocated spectrum), you could probably get it narrowed down to 10 meters if they are wide enough apart. AOA will do much better, despite being fuzzy at long distances, for routine tracking, but not to 10 meters.
I think I need to get a tin foil hat for my cell phone.
Of course... (Score:3, Insightful)
It tracks their cell phones. Those things are not necessarily in the same place.
Phone off but you can still be tracked (Score:5, Informative)
I'll just bet 192.com wants to know (Score:3, Interesting)
Kevin Mitnick (Score:2, Interesting)
complete government Know-You tools (Score:5, Insightful)
We must value our rights, such as privacy, before we accept technology. Electronic voting was the latest disaster. E-books will be the next.
Who do you trust? (Score:3, Funny)
TruePosition (Score:2)
Mapminder's software (Score:5, Interesting)
Blue tooth in Denmark to track your kid. (Score:5, Informative)
Some of these services come in Denmark as well. Today we already use some tracking systems to track children, preventing them from becoming lost. The below article describe a blue tooth system installed in Aalborg Zoo here in Denmark.
http://in.tech.yahoo.com/030620/137/25bu3.html
The system is in principle (but not technically) the same as triangulation of a cell phone to track your child between school and home. The main issue arises if tracking is allowed without the cell phone owners consent.
By the way; if I was a kid who didn't want mom and dad to know where I was, I would borrow my phone to someone else, or just turn it of. Kids are not stupid...
Cell Phones (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cell Phones (Score:2)
I like this comment. Next, I want French Tickler = Freedom Tickler
Finalnd was considering passing a similar law... (Score:2, Interesting)
If the bill is passed, Finland would become one of the first European countries to allow individuals to track others without their consent and could serve as an EU benchmark."
There is even a diagram [bbc.co.uk] showing how the system works.
Welcum 2
What a load (Score:4, Insightful)
Pity the poor humans who didn't have this technology available. The more I think about it, the more I wonder how we ever survived, not knowing where a "loved one" was at any moment. I'm of the opinion that people who would use such a service are obsessive, and probably need help.
Bush's Trip to Iraq and Journalists' Cell Phones (Score:2, Interesting)
"During the flight from Texas to Andrews Air Force Base in Maryland, where they will change planes, White House deputy chief of staff Joseph Hagin asks the journalists to remove the batteries from their cell phones so their movement cannot be tracked, and asks them not to turn on their cell phones when they arrive at Andrews. He tells them they will receive new cell phones when they reach Baghdad. Other journalists join the group at Andrews
There's more coming (Score:2)
We curretly use this for LBS (Location Based services) such as finding your nearest pub / taxi / cinema etc.
You do have the option to turn off the ability to be located by typing in
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:2, Interesting)
If it works for 911, why couldn't it work for the government?
Sounds to me like it just turns the GPS off for most people..
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:2)
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:3, Informative)
It's triangulation and position reporting based on the last cell that your phone was in. That's all. And the networks have been doing it for years as a side-effect of normal network activity. If the system didn't know where phones were in the country, how would they route calls to the correct base station?
Jeez, it's not hard, people...
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:3)
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:3, Informative)
As far as I'm aware, they all still require multiple nearby base stations. Typically, there's not much directional about the comms at those stations; it would be unreliable anyway, given the nature of mobile phone signals. Hence you still need to triangulate, or use some variation on the theme. The question is more the accuracy with which yo
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:3, Informative)
Any phone can be tracked in this manner.
Re:Usefulness vs. Controversialness (Score:2)
Re:AT&T has had this for a while (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:AT&T has had this for a while (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Nobody will track me by my mobile phone (Score:2)
Amen, same here. Too bad I blew my mod points earlier today.
Seems like most chatty (in public) people with cell phones have them for insecurity reasons.
Re:Nobody will track me by my mobile phone (Score:2)
The "newer is better" philosophy takes over a lot of people.
Re:Well, let's go... (Score:2)