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Showing posts with label tracking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tracking. Show all posts

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Lawmakers ask Apple to explain iPhone's tracking function

Following up on yesterday's revelation of the Big Brother tracking capability of the iPhone and iPad, lawmakers are asking Apple to explain what data is collected, and at least one is calling for an inquiry.

Rep. Ed Markey (D-Mass.), a member of the House Energy and Commerce committee and its former chairman, sent a letter today asking Apple to confirm the report and explain by May 12 how the data file works.

Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.) sent Apple a similar letter Wednesday.

The Wall Street Journal points out that Apple disclosed in a letter to Markey's committee last summer that the phone automatically transmits to itself information on a user's location.

Tech pundit Andy Ihnatko offers a "few reality checks" about what the iPhone is/isn't logging and why:



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Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Is your iPhone tracking your movements and keeping a secret file?

The Guardian newspaper has stirred up major buzz on the Web today with a report that two security researchers have apparently discovered that Apple's iPhone keeps track of a user's every movement and stores it on a secret file inside the device.

Moreover, writes The Guardian's Charles Arthur, the data -- which contains latitude and longitude and timestamp -- are then copied to the owner's computer when the devices are synchronized.

He says researchers Alasdair Allan and Pete Warden have posted details on their blogs and on a website that addresses key questions.

Meanwhile, Gizmodo's Sam Biddle used the data he found on his phone to post a map that he calls "jarringly accurate" of his travels up and down the East Coast over the past year.

Biddle writes that the phone appears to rely on tower triangulation rather than GPS pinpointing, meaning it doesn't help to switch off "location services."

How troubling is this? Here's how security researcher Allan puts it:

"Neither Pete nor myself think there is any sort of conspiracy going on, however we're both worried about this level of detailed location data being out there in the wild."

Biddle says he has asked Apple for commentary.

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