Slashdot Mirror


Cell Tracking on the Rise

An anonymous reader writes "ZDNet is reporting that with the recent advances in cell phone tracking tech more and more companies are using it to keep track of their employee's movements. From the article: 'The gains, say the converted, are many, ranging from knowing whether workers have been "held up" in the pub rather than in a traffic jam, to being able to quickly locate staff and reroute them if necessary. Not everybody is happy about being monitored, however, and civil rights group Liberty says the growth of tracking raises data privacy concerns.'"

10 of 233 comments (clear)

  1. Just because you have a mobile doesn't mean by Biotech9 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Just because you have a mobile doesn't mean that it has to be turned on.

    I'd gotten very used to always having a mobile on, being able to be contacted anywhere and at anytime. But I got rid of my mobile 3 years ago and haven't bothered getting a replacement, and it's been very refreshing to have to make appointments to meet people and so on.

    More realistically, if you have your own mobile, you can leave it on and have it with you 24/7. But a mobile from your job should be set to turn on at 9 and off at 5, if those are your hours. I'm shocked by how many people I work with allow their bosses to make them work outside of office hours by ringing them up and getting them to do errands in their own spare time. It's bad enough with European companies slowly moving towards the American model of unpaid lunch breaks that aren't even 30 minutes long, without also copying the 24/7 worker ethic.

  2. Re:Of course i'd complain by shotgunefx · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's one thing for the police to locate you, it's another for employers to do so.

    I'm not concerned with people getting busted for doing things on work time that they should not, but it's the precedent it sets.

    --

    -William Shatner can be neither created nor destroyed.
  3. Read between the lines by DavidHOzAu · · Score: 5, Informative

    I read the article, but when reading between the lines I noticed that someone could track your cell phone without any sort technological upgrade on your phone. This means that the tracking technology is on the telco's side, and if they are now offering it as a reliable service to the public, it means that it has been around for a while... sounds like old technology to me. I guess all this means is that now businesses can do what the government has been doing for years. Face it guys, our privacy has been invade-able for a while, and there is little that we (the concerned public) can do about it.

    oblig.: "In Russia, you can always find a Cell Phone. In Soviet Britain, Cell Phone finds YOU!"

  4. Isn't this a marketing opportunity.... by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... for the US. Govt.? They could recoupe some of the development and deployment costs of their spy technology. Sell a complete Software/Hardware package for small operators and call it: Echelon (TM), Corporate edition.
     
    .... Uhummmmm...... Now where did I leave that copy of 1984?????

    --
    Only to idiots, are orders laws.
    -- Henning von Tresckow
    1. Re:Isn't this a marketing opportunity.... by 1u3hr · · Score: 5, Funny
      Now where did I leave that copy of 1984?????

      In the drawer of the table in the alcove, comrade.

  5. Re:Solution by CaptainZapp · · Score: 5, Funny
    nah, leave it on in your desk draw after diverted it... that way you're still busy working back late. :)

    Nah, glue the phone to the next plane to Brasil, or another country with lenient extradition treaties.

    This should give the accounting department and the comptroller some pause.

    --
    ich bin der musikant

    mit taschenrechner in der hand

    kraftwerk

  6. Re:Of course i'd complain by swilver · · Score: 5, Funny
    What exactly are you up to which you dont want us to know about?
    It could be anything, if you want to find out sign up for my webcam for $50/hour.
  7. Employee Tracking Victim by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I used to work for a company that used those little HID access cards. They had a system that could detect those cards in each room, so they knew where employees were at all times. Well, one week I had the flu, and since they denied my request for sick time, I was in the office, making frequent runs to the restroom (get it?). Later that week, my manager actually wrote me up because he had proof I was spending over an hour a day in the rest room, and accused me of being a goof off.

    So, I resigned and immediately sued them. It turns out that a jury is very sympathetic when it comes to a company forcing a sick employee to come to work, even with a medical diagnosis of the flu and doctor orders to stay home. They are especially generous when it comes to a company actually writing someone up for trying to deal with the symptoms.

    Of course, since they were a startup (what other kind of company would do something like that?), they didn't have enough cash for the settlement. They couldn't appeal because the local DA promised criminal charges if they did. Since they didn't have case, I settled for a majority stake in the company. I then sold it all to one of their competitors who took all of their IP and fired all of the executives, including the asshole who did that to me.

  8. Stasi used radiation and smell to track you. by AHuxley · · Score: 5, Interesting
    How would you track ppl smart enough not to have a phone?
    Think like an East German.

    East German secret police, the Stasi used scandium-46 with hidden radiation detectors to identify and track dissidents.
    West German deutschmark banknotes, documents, clothing and meeting rooms where heavily tagged.
    New Scientist, January 3, 2001

    http://www.leftwatch.com/archives/years/2001/00000 4.html

    They also used to get your odour by rubbing it onto a piece of fabric. They would then have a jar with your fabric in it.
    Trained dogs would then sniff you out.
    Stasiland by Anna Funder

    http://www.arlindo-correia.com/081203.html

    In Capitalist west phone irradiates you.
    In Communist East Germany you irradiate phone.

    --
    Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
  9. Privacy is dead, join the fishbowl.... by jjh37997 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This wouldn't be such a bad thing if I could track the cell phones of the people who are tracking me. I really don't see what's so bad about letting my boss track me as long as I'm able to follow him around. It's the imbalance of power that's the main problem with typical surveillance. Want to track my movements with a camera? Go ahead.... but only if I get to know who's watching me and I have the ability to watch them back. An open and transparent society can make the world both safe and free. As it is now the powerful, well-connected and criminal can invade your privacy any time they want... privacy laws only prevent us from spying on them.