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posted by Fnord666 on Tuesday December 11 2018, @01:05PM   Printer-friendly
from the but-not-what-I-did dept.

Submitted via IRC for Bytram

Your Apps Know Where You Were Last Night, and They're Not Keeping It Secret

At least 75 companies receive anonymous, precise location data from apps whose users enable location services to get local news and weather or other information, The Times found. Several of those businesses claim to track up to 200 million mobile devices in the United States — about half those in use last year. The database reviewed by The Times — a sample of information gathered in 2017 and held by one company — reveals people’s travels in startling detail, accurate to within a few yards and in some cases updated more than 14,000 times a day.

These companies sell, use or analyze the data to cater to advertisers, retail outlets and even hedge funds seeking insights into consumer behavior. It’s a hot market, with sales of location-targeted advertising reaching an estimated $21 billion this year. IBM has gotten into the industry, with its purchase of the Weather Channel’s apps. The social network Foursquare remade itself as a location marketing company. Prominent investors in location start-ups include Goldman Sachs and Peter Thiel, the PayPal co-founder.

Businesses say their interest is in the patterns, not the identities, that the data reveals about consumers. They note that the information apps collect is tied not to someone’s name or phone number but to a unique ID. But those with access to the raw data — including employees or clients — could still identify a person without consent. They could follow someone they knew, by pinpointing a phone that regularly spent time at that person’s home address. Or, working in reverse, they could attach a name to an anonymous dot, by seeing where the device spent nights and using public records to figure out who lived there.

Many location companies say that when phone users enable location services, their data is fair game. But, The Times found, the explanations people see when prompted to give permission are often incomplete or misleading. An app may tell users that granting access to their location will help them get traffic information, but not mention that the data will be shared and sold. That disclosure is often buried in a vague privacy policy.

“Location information can reveal some of the most intimate details of a person’s life — whether you’ve visited a psychiatrist, whether you went to an A.A. meeting, who you might date,” said Senator Ron Wyden, Democrat of Oregon, who has proposed bills to limit the collection and sale of such data, which are largely unregulated in the United States.

“It’s not right to have consumers kept in the dark about how their data is sold and shared and then leave them unable to do anything about it,” he added.


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by edIII on Tuesday December 11 2018, @11:01PM

    by edIII (791) on Tuesday December 11 2018, @11:01PM (#773164)

    Not the biggest problem. The wireless carriers are gathering location information themselves, from the towers, in accordance with e911 laws, in five second increments. About as often as your phone polls the cell tower, there is a location record attached to your account in their databases. Verizon admitted they keep the data for years, and you know the NSA has that too.

    You have to fight that by using burner phones, use them for a period of time, then give them to the homeless with something like 60 days worth of credit. That's about the most you can do to mix that dataset up, and it still involves running no apps on your phone.

    The cellphone is the #1 offender for citizen privacy. Wish I could get groups of people together to exchange their phones, but that won't happen. My hope is that Purism gets the Librephone up and running, and that has a completely isolated cellular radio that can be removed. Hardware switches for everything else. If the cellular radio can be removed easily, then we should be exchanging on our cellar radios as often as possible with friends, families, co-workers. THAT would start some serious poisoning of the location data, while not actually affecting the ability of e911 services to isolate you if you needed help.

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