-Caveat Lector-

http://www.zdnet.com/zdnn/stories/news/0,4586,2203365,00.html/

February 7, 1999 5:59 PM PT

Is GPS tracking you?

GPS systems make it easier than
ever to track fish, Fido -- and
philandering spouses.

By Lisa M. Bowman, ZDNN


It's 10 p.m. -- Do you know where your children are? How about your pet? Or
your spouse who claims to be "working late"?

Global Positioning System technology, more commonly known as GPS, is making
it easier than ever to find stolen cars or track down Fido when he gets
lost.

But the system also can monitor people, a move privacy experts fear could
go too far.

"The control of GPS tracking information will be a significant public
policy issue several years from now," Phil Agre, an associate professor of
information studies at UCLA and a member of the board of the Electronic
Privacy Information Center. "Everyone should be aware of the dangers before
the it becomes locked in."

So far, GPS has been an invaluable tool for tracking endangered salmon,
monitoring train schedules and even drawing up maps. Companies such as
Troy, Michigan-based Onstar and Microsoft have developed GPS systems for
cars that send directions to drivers based on their locations. Some even
call the owner when a car "thinks" it's been stolen.

In Pontiac, Mich., non-violent prisoners wear GPS-based bracelets in lieu
of serving time behind bars. Systems are also in the works to ensure
Alzheimer's patients stay close to the hospital and children don't stray
too far from home.

"Maybe these are benign uses, but where does it stop?" asked Agre.

Agre and other privacy experts worry about misuse of the information by
groups ranging from insurance companies to the FBI.


SCARY SCENARIOS

Among the scenarios feared by privacy watchdogs:

Insurance companies could refuse to insure you, or charge you higher rates,
unless you install a tracking system on your car. They could then tell if
you drive over 55 or spend time in shady neighborhoods where your car has a
greater chance of being stolen.

FBI and local police officials could have access to your whereabouts by
simply logging onto a database attached to a cell phone, tollbooth or GPS
tracker. New York transportation authorities have turned over records of
its E-Z Pass toll, a wireless system that lets people drive through without
stopping, to police during a criminal investigation. What if it turned the
same information over to a local restaurant, so it knew you drove by it
every day?

Private investigators could get their hands on geographic tracking data to
trap a spouse suspected of straying. Gotcha! -- if toll bridge records
showed you driving when you were supposed to be at work.


FOLLOW THE DATA TRAIL

Privacy advocates fear agencies that aren't used to handling private
information, such as transit authorities, will become the keepers of
personal facts and figures that people don't necessarily want to be in the
public domain.

==========================================================
Geographic Data Tracking

Already companies and agencies are experimenting
with tracking people and things.  Will Big
Brother be next?

Prisoner:  In some states, corrections departments
           put GPS-linked bracelets on parolees.

Elderly:   In Japan, health officials are experimenting
           with monitoring Alzheimer’s patients
           whereabouts through GPS.

Car:       Some auto makers include GPS mapping systems
           that call the owner when the car "thinks"
           it’s stolen.  Some Web sites sell devices
           that allow you to surreptitiously track
           another car’s movements.

Child:     Several telecom companies are developing
           A system to track children through GPS,
           Expected to come to market in 2-3 years.

Toll road  Police have used records of wireless toll
passing:   collections to catch criminals.  Some fear
           P.I.’s might use it to snare philandering
           spouses.
==========================================================


But other privacy experts said such worries are simply alarmist. "A lot of
the privacy stuff I think is a little overblown," International Data Corp.
analyst Chris Christiansen said.

Currently, the systems are too expensive to be prevalent at the consumer
level -- plus many of the cheaper consumer devices are hindered by heavy
rain, trees and tall buildings, he said.

Originally developed to help the military track wayward sailors, GPS is
made up of 24 satellites, each with a clock, positioned so that three are
always above the horizon. Earthbound receivers can determine the position
of a person, place or thing by measuring the amount of time it takes for a
signal to arrive from three of the satellites.

Tracking people by GPS is not even prevalent enough for the ACLU -- known
for jumping on a cause at the slightest sign of injustice -- to take a
stand. Carrie Moss of the ACLU of Michigan -- which has closely watched her
area's plans to monitor prisoners -- said her organization wouldn't object
to tracking a shoplifter for a specific amount of time in lieu of jail
time. But it would fight efforts to track people who'd been convicted of
shoplifting once for the rest of their lives.


MATTER OF CONTROL

Kanwar Chadha, founder of GPS company SiRF Technology Inc., said the issue
comes down to who controls the information in a GPS system.

"GPS by itself only tells you where you are," said Chadha, whose company
makes GPS-based chipsets that can be embedded in cell phones, automobile
systems and handheld computers. "It's really when you combine GPS with some
kind of wireless system that privacy becomes an issue."

================================================
'Privacy is always an issue when you have a
 system that allows you track somebody'
              -- Kanwar Chadha, SiRF Technology
================================================

For example, Chadha said users of SiRF's products must push a button on
their GPS device if they want to transmit their whereabouts. Under this
system, companies or organizations can't track users without their
permission.

However, privacy concerns could arise under a model where control is
shifted back to the network -- as it would be with systems used to monitor
groups like Alzheimer's patients or children.

"Privacy is always an issue when you have a system that allows you track
somebody," Chadha said.

Chadha predicts consumers will protect their own privacy, by refusing to
deal with companies that threaten to violate it. Already, privacy groups
have pressured Intel Corp. to back away from shipping chips that
automatically identify a computer to a network.

For geographic tracking systems, Chadha said privacy isn't an issue, as
long as users control the transmission of their own location information.

"But it's an issue if somebody else plants the device on you," Chadha said.
"That's what I would call a misuse of the technology."

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