Google Deducing Wireless Location Data 90
bizwriter writes "When it comes to knowing where wireless users are, the carriers have had a lock on the data. But a patent application shows that Google is trying to deduce the information based on packet headers and estimated transmission rates. This would let it walk right around carriers and become another source of location data to advertisers."
Amazing Google (Score:5, Insightful)
You gotta admire Google. They are so endlessly, avidly proliferating themselves. If they ever turn evil we could be in a lot of trouble.
Re:Amazing Google (Score:4, Insightful)
If? [slashdot.org]
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Re:Amazing Google (Score:4, Insightful)
It was just an example, the first one I could find. Google has been cooperating with the Chinese govt. in terms of censoring their results since 2006. Google only very recently showed their unwillingness to continue censoring their results after the infamous hack on Google's operations. There isn't any evidence that Google did this for anything other than selfish reasons.
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It would be one thing if Microsoft, Yahoo,
Re:Amazing Google (Score:5, Insightful)
I *know* that I'm going to be burning some karma here but to me, "the shareholders made them do it" isn't an excuse for violating human rights.
They were just hacked and at the time, it was believed to be the work of Chinese hackers. This I suspect had a lot to do with why Google threatened to pull out of China and stop cooperating with the Chinese govt. In any case, I believe that my original point still stands; Google may have not broken any laws by participating in censorship in China but that does not mean they aren't evil. Willingly abiding by evil laws is evil in of its self.
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Freedom of speech. Governments should never be given an inherent right to censor speech of individuals nor the private sector in general.
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I *know* that I'm going to be burning some karma here but to me, "the shareholders made them do it" isn't an excuse for violating human rights.
So what do you do? Do you leave yourself open to being sued into oblivion by angry shareholders? Do you allow yourself to be fired and a head appointed who will violate those human rights? Or do you save your own skin and hope to make a difference later on down the line?
They were just hacked and at the time, it was believed to be the work of Chinese hackers. This I suspect had a lot to do with why Google threatened to pull out of China and stop cooperating with the Chinese govt. In any case, I believe that my original point still stands; Google may have not broken any laws by participating in censorship in China but that does not mean they aren't evil. Willingly abiding by evil laws is evil in of its self.
Not only were they hacked, but Google has in a few short years grown to have a huge presence in China. Before establishing a presence in China, most Chinese wouldn't care if Google didn't deliver search results, now if Google steps out o
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It looks like it is time to reform those liability laws.
Doing the right thing isn't always easy. If it were, there wouldn't be nearly so many oppressive regimes in the world. However, a line must be drawn in the sand at some point that tells th
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So what would you sugget Google to do ? Back out of China ?
How will that change anything ? Then Google will simply be replaced by someone who is willing to cope with China's censorship demands.
A more drastic (fictional i hope ) example could be like this : say you are providing medical help to a foreign country , who was just struck by some major disaster. Then the goverment tells you that you can help a certain group of people , but not some other group .And if you speak out against it , you won't be allo
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So what do you do?
You make a choice that defines you as a man. The dark side or the light side. You will pick the dark side, tell others to pick the dark side, and be a man not to be respected by your family and environment. Well done..not!
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Why do you suppose that is? They do it for their own selfish reasons. In that case, it is in their selfish interest to protect privacy to a degree to avoid losing market-share from user paranoia. Selfishness isn't automatically evil; the result is what matters. What Google did in China wasn't evil simply because it was done for selfish reasons. It was evil because censorship is inherently immoral.
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It was evil because censorship is inherently immoral.
Americans have a thing about censorship but really, all countries censor, it's only a matter of degree. Whether it's military secrets, privacy concerns, protecting children from pornography, DRM, commercial-in-confidence or religious fundamentalism all organizations including government censor speech. To call it inherently immoral to censor is silly.
In any case fixating on speech, while somewhat important, is secondary to focusing on action. Actions spe
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That doesn't make it right.
Act on what? China censors speech to prevent the citizenry from contimplating action. Same goes for Iran. Action generally follows speech; to censor speech is also to censor action. For the record, only some Americans really give a fuck about speech.
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Did you not read the Google S-1 filing? Here: http://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1288776/000119312504073639/ds1.htm [sec.gov] Their shareholders don't have much of a leg to stand on if they want to second guess Google management.
Re:Amazing Google (Score:4, Informative)
The legal requirements towards shareholders is really weak. About the only thing you can't do is deceive the shareholders about what you are planning.
Completely ignoring a billion people is not what shareholders want.
That's really bold of you to speak for all those people you don't know. In fact, in this case we know that the significant portion of Google shareholders actually do want Google to stop censoring search results in China.
Companies are run by people. They aren't faceless borgs; the problem is you don't know the faces of the people running the companies, so it's easy for you to imagine they are evil. In reality they are no more evil than the people running them.
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If "The Shareholders" have a say in what Google will do, then "The Shareholders" are part of Google. If "The Shareholders" require Google to do evil, then Google is evil.
That said, having Google in china does more towards freedom than against it.
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When your reputation is ruined, you can act without shame.
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Nah, they're a search engine looking for data to index.
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call me if Google manages to pass any of the wireless carriers on the 'evil' scale...if it's even possible.
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They'll just set the evil bit.
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It would be compounding their evility if the carriers removed the evil bit.
Would google be evil for forging it back in?
Would the carriers be evil again for reremoving it?
Minds boggle, at least mine.
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I hope they figure it out, because ATT somehow keeps my new Samsung phone from running Google maps properly. It can't figure out where it is at all. Makes it useless.
I don't want to pay the fuckers "by the drink" for a GPS service. And I want to strangle the marketer that invented that idiotic bit of buzzword bingo too.
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Samsung Flight.
The app itself goes where you put it. The cell id information on the help screen looks ok, but it doesn't display my current location from it.
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I can't remember the name, but in Snowcrash there was a company that was privatized from the government made up of the NSA and the Library of Congress. Google demonstrates more of the fictional company's capabilities every day
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Central Intelligence Corporation. Also interesting in that they obtained their data essentially by crowdsourcing from amateur spies.
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I love Google, but lets be realistic, its not a matter of if, its a matter of when. The current crew may not be evil even, but they won't be there forever.
I still find this sort of thing great though, I don't plan on owning an Android device so I'm not real concerned about them spamming me with ads or whatever they plan on building in, and even with that, I'd rather be spammed with location aware ads than something thats no where near me.
It might be nice to be told that theres a new place to eat a few bloc
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I frequently see variants of this notion and I still don't understand it.
I generally don't impulse-buy. I believe that the model of independently determining my wants and needs and then shopping for the best solution available soundly beats the model of listening to a company tell me why that company is good for me, buying items for needs I never even knew I had. As in, I don't just think that sounds good, I really bel
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First, I also almost always research most purchases greater than, say, $15. I will actually use google ads as one small part of that research. (Also, pertaining specifically to location based advertisements, as an example, I'd love to make a hobby out of random restaurant visits to holes-in-the-wall I wouldn't have heard of otherwise. Gran
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Have you ever been on holiday somewhere, got back, and then read about an exhibition that was very close to where you were staying that you'd have liked to see? It would be nice for a mobile device to pop up a list of int
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You gotta admire Google. They are so endlessly, avidly proliferating themselves. If they ever turn evil we could be in a lot of trouble.
it is worth admirable
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You gotta admire Google. They are so endlessly, avidly proliferating themselves. If they ever turn evil we could be in a lot of trouble.
If they turn evil? What do you think they're doing with all the search data they're gathering?
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If they ever turn evil...
Yeah, when it happens, google will inform us on the main page.
Carriers can mess with this? (Score:5, Interesting)
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Must have spent too much time reading TFB.
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With all due respect, the carriers have enough on their hands currently to not bother with this. Unless the priority of the information becomes tantamount, in which case we would see a scenario like "Gee that's a nice geo loco information gathering program you've got there. A shame something might happen to it".
Re:Carriers can mess with this? (Score:5, Funny)
Carriers need to do something deliberate to randomly slow transmission rates for random customers? I would like to know which carrier this is. Are they located in the US?
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Are you sure they care enough about this??
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Eh? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the carriers are "jealously guarding" their location data, how come every time I pull up Google Maps on my non-GPS BlackBerry it can figure out where I am to within a block or so? Either this patent is for a technology Google had figured out a long time ago, or else the carriers aren't as worried about having "a lock" on this data as TFA makes it sound.
answered your own question (Score:4, Interesting)
Either this patent is for a technology Google had figured out a long time ago
Ding ding ding. Google's been using the technology for a while; they just filed for the application.
You don't have to file for a patent the second you invent something. In fact, you usually want to wait as long as possible before the final steps. You get your foot in the door by filing some paperwork with the patent attorney, notarizing documents showing the invention, etc. etc.
Some cellsites broadcast their location (Score:1)
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My Samsung phone can't do it. ATT is blocking it. Google maps can't find my location either with the GPS or with the triangulation cell id location.
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For reference, you can get off of their NAT if you call them. I forget exactly how to do it as I haven't done it since I had a WinMo phone and needed the VPN to actually work. The iPhone doesn't seem to use a NAT since I can connect back to it without any problems.
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Interesting. Well, to you and Profane MuthaFucka, I'm on T-Mobile (USA).
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Cause Verizon doesn't mind selling your location to Google, AT&T on the other hand may not. I think they sell it to Google as the iPhones map app seems to always know the tower I'm on, regardless of wifi signal available, even in the middle of west texas with no other buildings in sight (so no wifi).
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The real reason for Google's DNS change suggestion (Score:5, Interesting)
Now we know the real reason for the suggestion Google has made recently to change the way DNS works to report part of the requesting IP address. They don't give one whit about decreasing unnecessary traffic. They just want to use that for additional location data.
Re:The real reason for Google's DNS change suggest (Score:2)
Also good for the feds to allow 'market forces' to track you.
Opt in for local deals direct to your phone.
No opt out if your of interest for the DHS.
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Why would they need DNS modified for that? For users connecting to a Google service, which is what would be needed to measure the kind of stuff this patent talks about, they already have the IP address, because the user, well, connected to them.
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Modifying DNS in the way they are requesting could be used - along with the technologies mentioned in this article - to determine or narrow down location information even on connections that aren't going to Google's servers. Thus allowing Google to track location information on everyone in the world all the time. That would be very valuable information to Google even if it were not as accurate as GPS, or as specific as a whole IP address, and even if it were in aggregate form.
The more information they can g
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mod him -5: bullshit.
Google already has the user's IP address.
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Did you read my other comments in response to this point?
it kind of doesent work (Score:1)
This is probably why my google calender app on my iphone switches to French when I am using it on my home network. I live in Sweden but somehow my ISP has been designated as French and I get a lot of French ads when browsing from home.
Its weird and somewhat annoying but I am getting a chance to brush up my French.
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That has very little to do with this technology and more with a mistake in a IP-to-geolocation database somewhere, most likely.
Blown out of proportion? (Score:2)
To be fair on Google, this story could actually just be sensationalist crap.
On Android phones for example, applications that use location data can either use GPS if available, or use your rough network location based on the cell tower you're communicating with- but obviously that's very rough.
This patent sounds like they're just trying to improve the usefulness of location data to make location based apps more useful when you don't have a GPS signal, have GPS disabled on low battery, or just don't have GPS
Patent problems... (Score:1)
This is another example of why patents are bad.
A a technical person - saying "Hey, if we have some devices communicating wirelessly, and we know about the protocols they are using to communicate, we can deduce a bunch of information about their approximate location just by watching how long it takes them to have certain conversations from different points of view.
Why should that be patentable? It is clever, but it's also somewhat obvious.
skyhook alternative when they did streetview (Score:2)
I was wondering why Google didn't scan for wifi access points when they did their streetview; this would have seeded their location database. After that, all the people running google maps on various smartphones with GPS capability would allow them to keep it up to date or cover areas street view mapping didn't cover.
Or maybe they did and sold the data to skyhook instead ;-)
Marketing slogans aren't what corporations do (Score:2)
The fiction that a corporation is a person - combined with the legal precedent that says that the executives can be sued if they do something that reduces profits - makes for some pretty well defined behavior by the corporation. It is solely concerned with maximizing its own revenue and any other concern is incidental or done to "look good". If the corporation were a real person and was evaluated by a psychologist it would be likely be diagnosed as a psychopath (sociopath).
Consider this when you parrot the
One step closer to the Information Society (Score:1)
GPS in our cell phones. Location-aware OSes. Now Google has figured out how to identify where packets came from.
Google turning evil nothing. Imagine what the government could do with this.