16 Jan
Posted by: Christopher S. Penn in: Privacy
Interesting takeaway from Macworld today:
Skyhook Wireless has driven around the US and Canada, mapping 23 million Wi-Fi hot spots to a GPS. Even if you’re not connected to the hot spot, the beacon service knows which hot spots you’re near, so when you use the Maps application on the iPod Touch or iPhone, you still get location data.
Neat, huh? Cool, huh? as Steve Jobs said.
Wireless is bidirectional.
You know what hot spots are near, and Skyhook’s service can triangulate on that.
The hot spots know you’re near. When you turn on your Wi-Fi enabled device, the grid knows where YOU are. All the time. As soon as that Wi-Fi laptop, iPod, iPhone, or other device powers on and starts looking for access points.
Food for thought.
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2 Responses
Richard Mondello
16|Jan|2008 1I’ll start making the Tinfoil iPod cases.
Nico
16|Jan|2008 2What’s the big deal? It’s not like it’s private information. People are be twittering where they are all the time
Serioulsy now, if you have a cell phone then you should have been worried about this for a long time.
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