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Samizdata, derived from Samizdat /n. - a system of clandestine publication of banned literature in the USSR [Russ.,= self-publishing house]

Technology is not the problem…

When one objects to something, it is important to have a clear idea exactly what you are objecting to and why. Fleet Online is a company offering an inexpensive way to track the location of someone else’s mobile phone to within 50 yards in an urban area. The system has built in safeguards that prevent someone tracking someone else without their permission (a text message is sent to the target phone notifying them of the ping and asking if they are content to be located. Also certain times in which being located is acceptable can be set up as a preference).

I have no problem with companies keeping track of their employees whilst they are on-the-job… for example the advantages to a courier company and their clients are too obvious to need elaboration. I don’t even have much of a problem with parents keeping track of their children. Like so much in the world, this ability to track one of the increasingly ubiquitous tools of modern life is not intrinsically good or bad in and of itself. The problems I foresee spring from the Regulation of Investigative Powers Act in Britain and the various equivalent powers of state found in many other nations. Almost certainly there will be a requirement for services like Fleet Online to allow the state to locate people without their permission and under the various provisions of the aptly names RIP Act, notifying the target they are subject to state scrutiny will itself be a crime.

When the RIP Act was first imposed, it was with assurances that access to private information like e-mail, ISP activity records and even decryption keys1 would be tightly controlled and limited to only a few essential key government agencies. Of course it did not take long for the state to try and expand the list of people who can get access to your private internet traffic details to essential key government agencies like local town councils, the Department of Health, the Environment Agency, the Food Standards Agency, the Postal Services Commission, and Fire Authorities. Previous assurances as to who would have access proved to be worthless and the people who uttered them straightforward liars. No real surprises there to any but the credulous. So does anyone seriously want to trust the same people with the ability to track not just your online life but your physical movements in the real world at the click of a mouse?

Technology is not the problem… the problem is a state with takes such power to itself with little more than an imperious demand to its subjects to ‘just trust us’ and ‘if you are not guilty, you have nothing to fear’.

1 = or more accurately the decryption keys of those ‘criminals’ who did not have a completely corrupted floppy disc to surrender on demand ‘on which their key codes are stored’. Corrupted you say? No! Really? Well I never. I guess I’ll never be able to access those files again… and nor will you.

5 comments to Technology is not the problem…

  • Absolutely agree.

    The currently fashionable reasoning seems to go like this:

    1) this is dangerous and complex
    2) this must be regulated by experts
    3) this must be reguated by government experts
    4) no-one else is competent to regulate them

  • Julian Morrison

    Nearly any of the techs that in government hands frighten, would in private hands be neat fun, harmless, or even convenient.

    The state is the problem.

  • Errr guys get real, this is a serious problem.

    You are with your mistress, your wife calls accusing you of being with your mistress, no you protest I’m at the office / club / golf course / church.

    “THEN YOU WON’T OBJECT TO ME PINGING YOUR MOBILE?” she screams.

    Horrific. Time for some entrepreneur to think up electronic counter-measures immediately and profitably.

  • Phil Bradley

    Fleet Online is just a commercial packaging of technology that has been around for a while. I am certain that governments have access to this technology. Recall the fuss after 9-11 about anonymous pre-paid mobile phones.

    Also spoofing SMS messages is straight forward. I am a bit rusty on SMS security, but basically there isn’t any. So you could send a spoof SMS confirmation to Fleet Online and its likely to fool the system and therefore you could track someone without their permission.

  • Jacob

    Hey, when you go to the mistress leave you cell phone in the office with a message saying you are in a meeting and cannot take the call – it’s that easy.
    When you use cell phones or ATMs you willingly give up some of your privacy, don’t you know it? You have the choice not to use them.