Wireless location tracking draws privacy questions
By Anne Broache
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: May 16, 2006, 3:10 PM PDT

http://news.com.com/Wireless+location+tracking+draws+privacy+questions/2100-1028_3-6072992.html?tag=nefd.top

Wireless products that can do everything from tracking your children to 
finding you a nearby date this weekend seem to fall outside the scope of 
federal privacy laws, and that may need to change, an industry group said.

At a panel discussion hosted by the Congressional Internet Caucus 
Advisory Committee, which aims at informing legislative aides, a 
wireless industry representative on Tuesday said he's concerned that 
many products that use geographic locating technology, such as those 
found in cars, aren't being held to the same standards as traditional 
wireless phone carriers.

"We're going to see in the next year pretty much all of the national 
wireless carriers deploy handsets that work on licensed commercial 
spectrum and also work off Wi-Fi hot spots," said Michael Altschul, 
general counsel to the Cellular Telecommunications and Internet 
Association (CTIA), an international trade association representing 
wireless carriers, suppliers and providers of wireless services. "I 
don't want a customer who starts a call in a Starbucks using a Wi-Fi hot 
spot, then steps outside and the call is handed off to a commercial 
mobile service, to have different privacy expectations."

Altschul was referring to Section 222 of the Communications Act, added 
in 1999, which specifies that "telecommunications carriers" must adhere 
to certain safeguards of their subscribers' personal information and 
call records.

Reacting to concerns over a new federal requirement that cell phone 
carriers install geographic-tracking technology in order for 911 
dispatchers to pinpoint their calls, CTIA in 2000 petitioned the Federal 
Communications Commission (click for PDF) to adopt new privacy rules 
dealing specifically with geographic location information.

The wireless industry reasoned that providing consumers with a "uniform 
set of expectations as to how their privacy rights would be protected" 
would be good for business, speeding the emergence of new, 
location-based services in the marketplace, Altschul said. But the FCC 
in 2002 rejected that proposal--which had drawn support from privacy 
advocates--and concluded that existing law contained clear enough legal 
obligations.

Jed Rice, a vice president with Skyhook Wireless, which develops 
software that uses Wi-Fi to pinpoint a person's location, readily 
admitted at Tuesday's discussion that his company is not subject to 
federal regulations. Skyhook makes a piece of free software that uses 
Wi-Fi hot spots to triangulate a user's location within 20 meters and 
then tailors search results to that spot. Rice emphasized that his 
company has "no record of who you are," and every user remains 
"completely anonymous."

"That doesn't mean we're not proactively getting involved to try and 
look at, if not federal regulations, at least what standards are set by 
watchdog groups and people who are very interested in issues about 
privacy," he said.

By contrast, Jim Smolen, a vice president at WaveMarket, which offers 
geographic locator software for keeping track of family members and 
friends in partnership with wireless phone carriers, said he thought his 
company would be "indirectly governed" by existing laws covering those 
companies.

Altschul said CTIA didn't have any plans to proposition federal 
regulators again, explaining that he wasn't optimistic that the FCC 
would be "any more open to the idea than they were then." The industry 
has gone on to voluntarily adopt its own set of privacy standards, which 
include notifying consumers of what sort of geographic information will 
be collected and receiving their consent prior to doing so.

Meanwhile, the controversy over location tracking doesn't appear to be 
going away anytime soon.

With more and more local governments showing interest in blanketing 
their areas with wireless networks, Altschul's concerns could have 
broader implications. For instance, a Google plan to provide free Wi-Fi 
to San Francisco residents gave pause to privacy advocates recently when 
the company revealed it planned to use geographic data to tailor 
advertising to users, unless they pay for a faster service from EarthLink.

A related situation, not addressed by Tuesday's panelists, involves cell 
phone tracking by police agencies and investigators. At the time that a 
1994 surveillance law known as the Communications Assistance for Law 
Enforcement Act, better known as CALEA, was passed, FBI officials said 
they wouldn't use the law to track mobile phones.

But court cases in recent years have demonstrated that breed of 
investigative tactic has been occurring--and judges have been divided on 
how to view such tracking. One federal judge in New York ruled last 
December that federal police could monitor the location of Americans by 
constantly tracking their cell phone signal without providing evidence 
of criminal activity. But two earlier decisions delivered an opposite 
conclusion.


Reply with a "Thank you" if you liked this post.
_____________________________

MEDIANEWS mailing list
[email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

Reply via email to