Contact us:
write c/o 96 Bold Street, Liverpool L1 4HY
email
 
Join our mailing list
Defy-ID - resisting state surveillance
NO2ID - Stop ID cards and the database state

ID cards: the truth

Technology

Related issues


(go to old version of website)

Concerns over GPS Child Tracking

Privacy

From
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/4922470.stm

Parents using new products which allow them to track their children may develop an "unhealthy and destructive" relationship with their child, a privacy group has warned.

Earlier this month, two new, low-cost devices which use Global Positioning Systems (GPS) were launched in the US, with both retailing for under $50. One is a miniature mobile phone, the other is built into a shoe.

And entertainment giant Disney is planning a mobile phone, targeted at up to 30 million children, which uses GPS to monitor where they are.

But Simon Davis, director of campaign group Privacy International, told BBC World Service's Culture Shock programme that he feared parents using GPS would find it both ineffective and dangerous.

"What this can result in - and we've seen this through visual surveillance technology and bugs that can be put into children's bedrooms - is parents becoming obsessed, to the point of having an unhealthy and destructive relationship with their children," he said.

"There is, particularly for young teenagers, a very important space that needs to be nurtured, for the development of the adolescent psyche.

"Parents have to be careful not to intrude too closely on that neutral zone." ...

...The trend for using GPS for tracking children began in Japan, with school backpacks and blazers being fitted with transmitters. These were hooked up to a monitoring headquarters at a security firm.

But Mr Davis said that if parents can track their children, "people with sinister intent can do so to".

"There is no such thing as a secure system," he added.

Mr Davis, who is also a visiting professor at the London School of Economics, said that one of his students had successfully proved how easy it was to hijack a GPS system, by putting Mr Davis' phone on a tracking project without his knowing.

It was done, he explained, by the student sending the phone a junk text message from a British-based website. Mr Davis said he deleted the text without realising its significance, and for 30 days afterwards, the students tracked his movements.

"When we get to GPS tracking, that process goes beyond the cells we have at the moment, to tracking to within a few metres," he said.

"If students can do that to me, then somebody who wants to do harm to a child can do it very simply.

"Parents should be outraged about the commercial availability of that service, rather than spending hard-earned money trying to track their own children... these companies are reinforcing fear, and falsely giving hope."

full article


 

NO2ID campaign
NO2ID discussion forum


Defy ID network
Defy ID discussion forum


 
Search:
renew for freedom - MAY 2006 - renew your passport
Edit - History - Print - Recent Changes - Search
Page last modified on 20 April 2006, at 12:17 PM