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Tagged: gps, location-based services

Monday, January 23, 2012

The Wall Street Journal reported that the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously ruled today that police must obtain a search warrant prior to before attaching a global positioning system (GPS) device to a suspect's car. According to the Journal, "The government argued that attaching the tiny device to a car's undercarriage was too trivial a violation of property rights to matter." Also according to the Journal, "The decision upholds a federal appeals court in Washington, which voided a drug conviction because police obtained evidence by using the GPS tracker to follow the suspect's movements without a valid warrant."

According to the New York Times, "That ruling avoided many difficult questions, including how to treat information gathered from devices installed by the manufacturer and how to treat information held by third parties like cellphone companies." The Times also reported that, "Though the ruling was limited to physical intrusions, the opinions in the case collectively suggested that a majority of the justices are prepared to apply broad Fourth Amendment privacy principles unrelated to such intrusions to an array of modern technologies, including video surveillance in public places, automatic toll collection systems on highways, devices that allow motorists to signal for roadside assistance and records kept by online merchants."

Writing in a majority opinion and reported by the Times, Justice Antonin Scalia said, "We hold that the government’s installation of a G.P.S. device on a target’s vehicle, and its use of that device to monitor the vehicle’s movements, constitutes a ‘search.'"

by Joe Francica on 01/23 at 02:12 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: gps, lbs, location-based services, privacy, tracking

Saturday, November 26, 2011

It's distracting enough sometimes to look at your personal nav device and watch the road at the same time. But this new augmented reality app from Route 66 has added another element that may further throw drivers off course. The app shows drivers the way by placing a vehicle graphically superimposed onto the road network of the navigation device. You follow the vehicle along the path just like you might follow a friend who knows the way. However, to me this is a recipe for disaster. You need to watch the "real" car in front of you not the graphic. See the video below and see if you agree.

Continue reading...

by Joe Francica on 11/26 at 11:54 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share
Narrow your search further: gps, location-based services, navigation

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Esri wants you to know that the company's Live Severe Weather Map "allows you to view continuously updated U.S. tornado reports, wind storm reports, weather warnings, and precipitation. The map also pulls in social media pertaining to severe weather events." 

by Nora Parker on 05/25 at 05:11 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Oops, that was supposed to go into our "Worth a Click" section! User error!

-- original post ---

"The quick summary: I believe I have confirmed that Apple is not storing your location, but the (actual or estimated) location of cell towers (and WiFi access points) that are close to you, to help locate you as you move (these are not necessarily towers that you have been in communication with). In the data I have examined there is nothing that is based on the accurate location of the iPhone. For a good example, see my previous post showing the location of cell equipment in Coors Field baseball stadium, and not revealing the location of my home which is very close to there. In my opinion, if Apple was storing this data in order to know where you had been, they would be storing different, more accurate location data that they have access to."

- GeoThought Blog

by Adena Schutzberg on 04/24 at 09:44 AM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

Thursday, March 24, 2011

At CTIA, The Wireless Association's conference in Orlando, Florida this week, location technology was there but not in a huge way. But it will be. That's my prediction and I'm sticking to it. Here's why: money.

While the expostion floor is stacked with wireless service providers, chip makers, telecommunication tesing services, and network infrastructure players, all vying for the attention of AT&T, Verizon, and Sprint (sorry...T-Mobile is off the table now), it's not a conference for location-based services applications...yet. Even Qualcomm didn't have its usual location technology partners around its booth. But when deals are struck between AT&T and Walmart, Verizon and Disney, Sprint and McDonalds, for example, where the payout becomes measured in billions of wireless transactions, this conference will be filled with attendees looking to see how their tiny LBS app can get the attention of the carriers, instead of say, Apple or Google. Because, the scale is not there as I mentioned in one of my earlier reports.

It was interesting to note that someone posted on Twitter that Google was missing from this show...and so was Apple. For now, they are the gatekeepers of LBS. Google at one point bid on spectrum in the TV band and rumors fly on perhaps their acquisition of a wireless provider. But somebody will figure that out of the billions of SMS messages, tweets and check-ins broadcast wirelessly, that everyone has a location. It's big data. Harvesting these data is what mobile location based advertising is all about. And that's when the wireless carriers will get interested. They are late to the game and this was echoed by several people with whom I spoke. But today, they understand that SMS and connecting to the Internet outpaces voice in data transmission so they beef up wireless plans with data packages. Location services for the carriers is embedded today in their infrastructure because they were mandated to do so by the FCC. But it was never thought it would make them money until the transaction rates made it profitable. And that's coming.

Already, CTIA this year revealed that the carriers are making deals with some of the LBS service providers like the AT&T/Placecast deal. The wireless providers are opening their APIs to expose their location platform which allows the app developers the ability to access network centric location positioning. Today, app developers tap into the handsets that have GPS or Wi-Fi location positioning or both. Is it enough? For some it is but for others, using the carrier's platform provides security, scalability and privacy. That may be a game changer. We'll see.

At past CTIA's, especially those in the Bay Area, separate LBS conferences were held nearby like SiRF's (now CSR)  Location Conference. I expect that CTIA will expand its location technology program as the market for location-based advertising (LBA) grows steadily.

by Joe Francica on 03/24 at 03:24 PM | Comments | Bookmark and Share

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