Cell Phones Are Tracking Devices That Governments, Police, Big Corporations
And Stalkers Can Use To Easily Track Your Movements
End of the American
Dream
If you regularly
carry a cell phone around with you, you might as well say goodbye
to your privacy. The truth is that any cell phone you buy is going
to track you wherever you go 24 hours a day. Just as you leave "footprints"
wherever you go on the Internet, so also your cell phone is constantly
recording wherever you go in the physical world. Most people do
not realize this, but the reality is that cell phones are tracking
devices that governments, law enforcement authorities, big corporations
and even stalkers can use to easily track your movements. If you
do not know about this yet, then you are going to be absolutely
amazed by what you are about to read. Not only do cell phones track
you wherever you go, they can also be used to listen to your private
conversations even when they are turned off. We
live in a brave new world, and there are a lot of control freaks
out there that love to monitor where we go and what we do. Unfortunately,
it seems like every time technology advances, we lose a little bit
more privacy. Eventually, we may wake up someday in a world where
there is absolutely no privacy left.
On Black Friday,
two U.S. shopping malls started actively using the FootPath Technology
tracking system to monitor their customers.
This system
captures the unique identification number that is assigned to each
phone, and thus it enables the malls to constantly monitor what
stores their customers enter.
The malls are
putting up signs that warn customers about this system and that
instruct them that they can "opt out" by turning off their cell
phones.
But should
we really have to "opt out" in order to maintain our privacy?
A new article
posted on
CNN described the "test" that will be running for the rest of
the year at these malls....
Starting
on Black Friday and running through New Year's Day, two U.S. malls
Promenade Temecula in southern California and Short Pump Town
Center in Richmond, Va. will track guests' movements by monitoring
the signals from their cell phones.
While
the data that's collected is anonymous, it can follow shoppers'
paths from store to store.
The goal
is for stores to answer questions like: How many Nordstrom shoppers
also stop at Starbucks? How long do most customers linger in Victoria's
Secret? Are there unpopular spots in the mall that aren't being
visited?
It is being
argued that since our movements on the Internet are tracked, we
should not object when our movements in the physical world are tracked.
But if we say
this is okay, where will it all end?
Will we eventually
live in a world that makes the movie "Minority Report" look tame
by comparison?
So exactly
how intrusive is the FootPath Technology tracking system?
A Time
magazine article recently explained how the system functions....
It works
like this: A network of monitoring units are set up across a mall
to track shoppers’ cellphone signals, locating them within a couple
of meters. The data is then fed to a central processing center.
Afterwards, management can gain insight into their customers’
shopping habits, letting them know which stores complement each
other or which pathways have the most foot traffic so they can
allocate their maintenance crews and ad posters accordingly.
It is not as
intrusive as it could be. But the thing is, once you give these
control freaks an inch, eventually they will take a mile.
In fact, governments
all over the world are already using cell phones to track down "enemies
of the state".
For example,
a recent Bloomberg
article described how the government of Iran is aggressively
using cell phones to crack down on dissidents....
The Iranian
officers who knocked out Saeid Pourheydar’s four front teeth also
enlightened the opposition journalist. Held in Evin Prison for
weeks following his arrest early last year for protesting, he
says, he learned that he was not only fighting the regime, but
also companies that armed Tehran with technology to monitor dissidents
like him.
Pourheydar,
30, says the power of this enemy became clear as intelligence
officers brandished transcripts of his mobile phone calls, e-mails
and text messages during his detention. About half the political
prisoners he met in jail told him police had tracked their communications
and movements through their cell phones, he says.
Christians
in Iran have learned that they must take the batteries entirely
out of their cell phones before they gather at their secret meeting
places. Otherwise, the secret police are likely to show up and drag
them off to prison.
Eventually,
most of the governments on earth will be utilizing these kinds of
capabilities.
In the United
States, cell phone companies are actually required by law to be
able to pinpoint the locations of their customers to within 100
meters. Of course most cell phone providers are able to track their
customers much more accurately than that.
Law enforcement
authorities all over the U.S. are already using cell phones to track
the locations of criminal suspects and to listen to their conversations.
Even if a cell
phone is completely turned off, law enforcement authorities can
still listen in on the conversations that a suspect is having. All
that is necessary is for the battery to still be in the cell phone.
According to
CNET News, the FBI can remotely activate the microphone on your
cell phone and listen to whatever you are saying....
The FBI
appears to have begun using a novel form of electronic surveillance
in criminal investigations: remotely activating a mobile phone's
microphone and using it to eavesdrop on nearby conversations.
The technique
is called a "roving bug," and was approved by top U.S. Department
of Justice officials for use against members of a New York organized
crime family who were wary of conventional surveillance techniques
such as tailing a suspect or wiretapping him.
When you make
a telephone call, it is never private. The reality is that the NSA
has been monitoring all phone calls for years and years. According
to
USA Today, the NSA intends "to create a database of every call
ever made"....
The National
Security Agency has been secretly collecting the phone call records
of tens of millions of Americans, using data provided by AT&T,
Verizon and BellSouth, people with direct knowledge of the arrangement
told USA TODAY.
Isn't that
a bit sobering?
But it isn't
just the federal government that is using cell phone information
for law enforcement purposes.
In some areas
of the United States, law enforcement authorities are pulling data
out of cell phones for no apparent reason whatsoever. According
to the ACLU, state police in Michigan are now using "extraction
devices" to download data from the cell phones of motorists that
they pull over. This is happening even if the motorists that are
pulled over are not accused of doing anything wrong.
The following
is how an article on
CNET News described the capabilities of these "extraction devices"....
The devices,
sold by a company called Cellebrite, can download text messages,
photos, video, and even GPS data from most brands of cell phones.
The handheld machines have various interfaces to work with different
models and can even bypass security passwords and access some
information.
Would you want
the police doing that to you?
Sadly, it is
even incredibly easy for hackers and stalkers to tap into your cell
phone these days.
The following
short excerpt comes from a news story posted
by WTHR....
Spyware
marketers claim you can tap into someone's calls, read their text
messages and track their movements "anywhere, anytime." They say
you can "catch a cheating spouse", protect your children from
an evil babysitter and "hear what your boss is saying about you."
And while you're spying on others, the Spyware companies say "no
one will ever know" because it's supposed to be "completely invisible"
with "absolutely no trace."
Security
experts say it's no internet hoax.
"It's
real, and it is pretty creepy," said Rick Mislan, a former military
intelligence officer who now teaches cyber forensics at Purdue
University's Department of Computer and Information Technology.
Mislan
has examined thousands of cell phones inside Purdue's Cyber Forensics
Lab, and he says spy software can now make even the most high-tech
cell phone vulnerable.
For even more
on what hackers and stalkers can do to your cell phone, just check
out this amazing
video.
This is just
another sign that we are rapidly becoming a "Big
Brother" society where virtually everything that we do is watched,
listened to, tracked or monitored.
For much more
on this dramatic transformation of our society, check out this article:
"Every
Breath You Take, Every Move You Make – 14 New Ways That The Government
Is Watching You".
But even with
the advanced capabilities that they now have, the control freaks
that run things are going to want to push things even further in
the future.
For example,
not all of us carry a cell phone with us wherever we go.
So how will
they track the rest of us?
Implanting
a microchip in all of us would make identification and tracking
of the population so much easier.
How soon will
it be before that idea starts getting pushed to the forefront?
We can all
see where all of this is headed.
When George
Orwell wrote "1984", a lot of people believed that it was impossible
for our world to end up like that.
Well, the technology
for a world that is far more repressive than "1984" is being put
into place. Every single day, we lose a little bit more privacy.
We are constantly being told that we need to sacrifice just a "little
bit" of liberty and freedom for the good of national security.
The world is
changing. All of us better wake up.
For most of
human history, the vast majority of people have lived under repressive
governments.
Today, liberty
and freedom are being pushed back in every corner of the globe.
Unless this
trend is reversed, most of humanity will once again end up living
under deep tyranny. Only this time, the "authorities" will be equipped
with "Big Brother technology" unlike anything that the world has
ever seen before.
Do not take
liberty and freedom for granted.
Once they are
gone, they will be incredibly difficult to get back.
Reprinted
with permission from End
of the American Dream.
December
2, 2011
Copyright
© 2011 End
of the American Dream
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