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Smartphone Location Tracking: What You Need To Know

By JORDAN ROBERTSON   04/23/11 06:55 PM ET   AP

Smartphone Location Tracking

SAN FRANCISCO -- The revelation this past week that Apple Inc.'s popular iPhone and iPad devices keep files of users' location data raises legal and ethical questions.

The company has not commented on the controversy, but has said that the only location data the company collects is kept anonymous and not able to be tied back to specific users. Google Inc. has said the same about location data that is stored on smartphones that run its Android software. Both companies have maintained that the practice is clearly outlined in their privacy policies.

Here's a look at what the issue means for you, and what you can do to protect your location data, as well as the trade-offs in convenience that that entails.

Q: What is Apple collecting?

A: Technically, Apple itself is collecting very little. According to a letter that the company sent Congress last year, Apple only collects information on the location of nearby cell towers and Wi-Fi networks. It says that data is anonymized so that it isn't tied to a particular user's phone. However, security researchers have discovered that iPhones and iPads do store individuals' geographic coordinates – and have been for at least a year.

Q: What's happens to that information?

A: The information appears to stay on the devices themselves, but is also transferred to any computers that the devices are synced to. That concerns security experts because the information is transferred in an unencrypted form, which makes it a target for hackers. Those who specialize in breaking in to Apple's products say it would be very difficult to steal the file remotely because of security changes that Apple has recently made to its software. However, anyone with physical access to the phone – including devices lost or stolen – could easily see the data.

Q: What can I do to prevent this information from being collected?

A: Fortunately, it's easy to turn off the tracking capability through the settings menus. The same goes for phones built on Google Inc.'s Android operating software. Unfortunately, doing so cripples a lot of applications that make smartphones "smart" in the first place, such as maps and the Foursquare social media service. Turning off tracking means those applications won't have access to your GPS locations either, making them useless.

Q: What are lawmakers doing about such tracking?

A: For now, few rules apply. The Federal Communications Commission prohibits telephone companies from sharing customer data, including location information, with outside parties without customer consent. Yet those rules do not apply to Apple and other device makers or to the new ecosystem of mobile apps made by third-party developers. What's more, because those rules were written for old-fashioned telephone service, it's unclear whether they apply to mobile broadband service at all – even for wireless carriers like AT&T and Verizon. The FCC and the Federal Trade Commission say they are looking into the issue.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JohnSawyer
arglebargy
03:00 AM on 04/26/2011
Someone needs to write an app that will delete the tracking file on a regular basis, possibly with options as to how often to delete it (daily, weekly, etc.). I wonder if Apple would turn it down (the answer isn't a foregone conclusion). If Apple turned it down, it might become a hit on jailbroken iPhones.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
snorrk
11:11 PM on 04/25/2011
So the FCC and the FTC is looking into this. That gives me so much confidence it gives me goosebumps. I know they will certainly have meetings where they soberly and thoroughly review the facts while taking industry and interested party testimony before they cave utterly. They will quietly adopt the loss of citizen privacy while no one notices or reports the swapping of lucrative job positions between the regulators and the regulated.
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11:21 AM on 04/25/2011
Don't understand why there are like 5 articles about this on HP! If you don't want to be tracked, or you want to hold onto your privacy... just don't use those services or devices, there is really nothing more to it... Or the media could keep writing articles about it...
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FreedomBeforeSecurity
Primary: The only time we truly control our future
05:52 PM on 04/25/2011
The problem with this isn't that Apple/Google do this, but that they did so without TELLING US they track and record the movements of American citizens. Something that requires a court order for Uncle Sam to do.
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fgbouman
Curmudgeon & Designer
08:04 PM on 04/24/2011
Tracking information stored on smart phones, if you can get it off the phone at all, is almost useless for reasons too numerous to go into here.
I have to wonder if anyone commenting on this has actually taken a look at the files and seriously tried to figure out what nefarious thing they'd do with the data. C'mon, get serious about real issues.
03:19 PM on 04/24/2011
"Fortunately, it's easy to turn off the tracking capability through the settings menus."

THis is WRONG.

The "Location Services" option on an iPhone ONLY applies to GPS. The recent iPhone tracking controversy is based on the phone's collection of information from cell towers and wifi hotspots, not GPS.

As smartphones are becoming ubiguous, and overtaking pc's as the most common computer for people to have, they have naturally become the future of computer crime. Hacking smartphones is already a reality and will blossom in ways we can't yet imagine.

The info in dipute could be used not only for stalking, but to profile people and there habits/schedules. If i know there's a 90% probability that you'll be out of your house for 2 hours on tuesday, then i would consider that a good time to rob you.

We don't have only the police to worry about, using smartphone info without the need for a warrant (which at least acted as a minor hurdle to protect our civil liberties), but also the ever enterprising world of criminals that can find a lot of uses for this tracking info.
iflew
Dyno Remediator
02:08 PM on 04/24/2011
On the plus side it can help in emergencies like kidnapping, medical probs etc.

I don't really see a down side because a person can get a couple of disposable phones and leave their own at home. Probably not needed unless you are working in a foreign country on a classified something or another.

Philanderers and crooks probably have known or suspected they could be tracked for years.
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Brad Martin
12:59 PM on 04/24/2011
Any cellphone can be tracked so stop complaining!
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12:24 PM on 04/24/2011
I haven't heard anything about Android storing your location data on your phone, which is the basis of the iPhone scandal. Is this a new story, or is the author creating a false equivalence between the two platforms by lying about Android? Carriers have long stored your location data, and having an anonymous corporate entity possess this information has long been a trade off of using a cell phone. But storing it in an accessible file, on your phone and computer, which anyone can potentially access and immediately map your location, is a new low. Unless I missed the scandal where it was discovered Android also does this, the article should acknowledge it's about iPhones, from its headline on.
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mmkay
Holy Sith! 'mkay?
09:00 AM on 04/24/2011
Blimey. It really is a smart phone.