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Big Boss Is Watching
By Ben Charny 
Staff Writer 
CNET News.com
9-25-4
 
Cell phones are giving employers new ways to
check up on employees in the field--and raising
fresh workplace privacy concerns as a result. 
  
On the leading edge of the trend is Nextel
Communications. The wireless provider began
selling its Mobile Locator service last November,
giving bosses an easy way to find employees who
carry GPS-equipped cell phones. 
  
Earlier this month, mobile tracking firm Xora
showed off the latest version of its Nextel GPS
(global positioning system) phone software. The
company says 1,600 corporate customers have
signed up for its services, including "geofences"
technology that sets off an alarm at the office
when field workers go to preprogrammed off-limits
sites, such as a bar or a park. News.context
What's new: GPS-enabled cell phones can track
users, and employers are eager to keep their
mobile workers on an electronic leash. 
  
Bottom line: Bosses want the service, many
consumers want the service, and the technology is
becoming cheaper and more widely available. Get
used to the eye in the sky. 
  
More stories on GPS 
  
"There's no electro shock--yet," Xora CEO Sanjay
Shirole said. 
  
Employee-tracking devices are gaining steam
thanks to ever-more-accurate GPS technology and a
U.S. mandate requiring wireless companies to
develop ways for emergency workers to find the
physical location of people who dial 911 on a
cell phone. 
  
Developed in the 1970s by the U.S. military, GPS
uses signals from low orbit satellites to
triangulate the position of a ground-based
receiver. GPS trackers were once an expensive
luxury, but costs have plunged with the expansion
of cellular-phone services. 
  
Now new enhanced 911 (E911) emergency regulations
governing wireless carriers promise to unleash
profitable new GPS services, analysts say. To
comply with the rules, carriers have begun
running more accurate GPS technology capable of
supporting a range of commercial services that go
beyond emergency location. 
  
"This high-accuracy infrastructure is setting the
stage for high-accuracy location-based services,"
said a spokesman for TruePosition, a cell phone
location service provider. 
  
Other GPS cell phone service providers include
TeleNav and uLocate. 
  
Tracking the market In a sign of growing market
for such services, GPS chip designer SiRF
Technology, which provides GPS technology for
handset maker Motorola, has seen its revenue grow
from $15 million in 2001 to $30.4 million in 2002
to $73.1 million last year. The company went
public in April. 
  
  
Here in Houston there is a giant billboard that
says something like, "Slackers beware" in
advertising the GPS phones and walkie talkies.
They might say in the article they don't
recommend this technology for sniffing out
loafers but their actions say something
different. --Terrence Mann 
  
  
Chip designer Qualcomm is also seeing demand for
its GPS One technology, having signed up 15
carriers worldwide and around 20 handset
manufacturers. As of April, about 120 cell phone
models contained Qualcomm-based GPS units. Along
with providing chips, Qualcomm sells server
software for improving GPS speed and accuracy. 
  
Xora said hundreds of companies, including
transportation giant U.S. Foodservice, have
signed up for its GPS TimeTrack technology to
monitor employee timesheets, jobs and locations
using GPS-enabled Nextel phones. 
  
GPS TimeTrack is a Java program that sits on a
cell phone, and periodically requests latitude
and longitude information from the phone's GPS
system. At this point, Nextel is the only company
that makes a GPS-enabled phone that works with
the software, although the company expects the
application to be supported by other phone
makers. "There's no electro shock--yet." --Sanjay
Shirole, CEO of Xora 
  
  
Xora's product is taking off quickly. It was only
July when the company said it signed its 1,000th
GPS TimeTrack customer. "It's just incredible
momentum," said Ananth Rani, the company's vice
president of products and services. "We're adding
about 200 a month." 
  
As GPS technology proliferates, there's growing
awareness among cell phone owners that the
devices can track them. Nearly half of all
wireless phone users and 55 percent of all
wireless Internet users knew of some
location-based services, according to a survey by
In-Stat/MDR. More importantly to U.S. cell phone
carriers, more than a third of those surveyed
said they'd be willing to pay a monthly fee for
location services. 
  
Nevertheless, the surveillance capabilities of
these phones are raising privacy concerns. 
  
Every move you make, the boss is watching you One
of the earliest examples of how an employer can
walk this fine line is in Chicago, where about
500 city employees now carry geo-tracking phones,
mainly as a tool to increase their productivity.
The phones were distributed to employees only
after their unions won several concessions,
including allowing workers to shut down
geo-tracking features during lunch time and after
hours. 
  
Tracking employees using Nextel phones 
  
Another showdown over the technology erupted last
year in Massachussetts, when the state highway
department proposed issuing GPS-phones to
snowplow drivers to achieve greater
accountability from 2,200 independent contractors
used to clear the roads. Hundreds of drivers
threatened to sit out the first major snowfall of
the year in protest, but eventually agreed to use
the phones on a trial basis. 
  
A San Diego-based consumer advocacy group, the
Privacy Rights Clearinghouse, advises employers
to only consider using the phones to achieve a
legitimate business purpose, and not check up on
potential loafers. 
  
"There are good business reasons for using it," a
representative for the group said. "But it must
be coupled with a very robust privacy policy." 
  
- News.com's Michael Kanellos and Ed Frauenheim
contributed to this report. 
  
Copyright �2004 CNET Networks, Inc. All Rights
Reserved.
http://news.com.com/Big+boss+is+watching/2100-1036_3-5379953.html?tag=nefd.lede
 

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