Showing posts with label cell phones. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cell phones. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 7, 2012



March 6, 2012 10:02 PM

DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) – Think about all the personal information we keep in our cell phones: It’s something to consider after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit ruled it is now legal for police to search cell phones without a warrant.

Former Dallas FBI Agent Danny Defenbaugh said the ruling gives law enforcement a leg up. “I think not only will it help them, but it could be life saving,” said the former Special Agent, who was based in Dallas.

The decision stems from an Indiana case where police arrested a man for dealing drugs. An officer searched the suspect’s cell phone without warrant.

The judge in the appeal case, Judge Richard Posner, agreed that the officer had to search the phone immediately or risk losing valuable evidence. Judge Posner ruled it was a matter of urgency, arguing it was possible for an accomplice to wipe the phone clean using a computer or other remote device.

Defenbaugh says the ruling takes into account exigent or time-sensitive circumstances that could be life saving in more urgent cases, such as child abduction. ”If the child is alive and you’re only minutes behind, that could be critical to recovering that child alive,” added Defenbaugh.

Paul Coggins is the former U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas. Coggins says the court’s ruling pushes the envelope on privacy issues. Judge Posner ruled that the search was legal because the officer conducted a limited search and only looked for a phone number associated with the alleged drug deal.

However, Coggins wonders if it opens the door to more extensive searches down the road. “Does that mean officers now have the right to search through your phone, search through your search history, your photographs, your e-mails and the rest, because it could all be wiped clean,” Coggins asked.

Many critics are asking the same question. They call the ruling an invasion of privacy that far outweighs the needs of law enforcement.

Both Defenbaugh and Coggins agree that the case is likely to go to the U.S. Supreme court.










privacy

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Habitual: Checking Facebook or Email

Illness. 





(CNN) -- There I was at a long-awaited dinner with friends Saturday night, when in the midst of our chatting, I watched my right hand sneaking away from my side to grab my phone sitting on the table to check my e-mail.

"What am I doing?" I thought to myself. "I'm here with my friends, and I don't need to be checking e-mail on a Saturday night."

The part that freaked me out was that I hadn't told my hand to reach out for the phone. It seemed to be doing it all on its own. I wondered what was wrong with me until I read a recent study in the journal Personal and Ubiquitous Computing that showed I'm hardly alone. In fact, my problem seems to be ubiquitous.

The authors found smartphone users have developed what they call "checking habits" -- repetitive checks of e-mail and other applications such as Facebook. The checks typically lasted less than 30 seconds and were often done within 10 minutes of each other.

On average, the study subjects checked their phones 34 times a day, not necessarily because they really needed to check them that many times, but because it had become a habit or compulsion.

"It's extremely common, and very hard to avoid," says Loren Frank, a neuroscientist at the University of California, San Francisco. "We don't even consciously realize we're doing it -- it's an unconscious behavior."

Why we constantly check our phones

Earlier this year, Frank started to realize that he, too, was habitually checking his smartphone over and over without even thinking about it. When he sat down to figure out why, he realized it was an unconscious, two-step process.

First, his brain liked the feeling when he received an e-mail. It was something new, and it often was something nice: a note from a colleague complimenting his work or a request from a journalist for help with a story.

"Each time you get an e-mail, it's a small jolt, a positive feedback that you're an important person," he says. "It's a little bit of an addiction in that way."

Once the brain becomes accustomed to this positive feedback, reaching out for the phone becomes an automatic action you don't even think about consciously, Frank says. Instead, the urge to check lives in the striatum, a part of the brain that governs habitual actions.

The cost of constant checking

For Frank, constant checking stressed him out and really annoyed his wife.

Dr. Adam Gazzaley, a neurologist at UCSF, sees another cost: Whenever you take a break from what you're doing to unnecessarily check your e-mail, studies show, it's hard to go back to your original task.

"You really pay a price," he says.

Habitually checking can also become a way for you to avoid interacting with people or avoid doing the things you really need to be doing.

"People don't like thinking hard," says Clifford Nass, a professor of communication and computer science at Stanford University. Constantly consulting your smartphone, he says, "is an attempt to not have to think hard, but feel like you're doing something."

How to know if you're a habitual checker

1. You check your e-mail more than you need to.

Sometimes you're in the middle of an intense project at work and you really do need to check your e-mail constantly. But be honest with yourself -- if that's not the case, your constant checking might be a habit, not a conscious choice.

2. You're annoying other people.

If, like Frank, you're ticking off the people closest to you, it's time to take a look at your smartphone habits.

"If you hear 'put the phone away' more than once a day, you probably have a problem," says Lisa Merlo, a psychologist at the University of Florida.

3. The thought of not checking makes you break out in a cold sweat.

Try this experiment: Put your phone away for an hour. If you get itchy during that time, you might be a habitual checker.

How to get rid of your checking habit

1. Acknowledge you have a problem.

It may sound AA-ish, but acknowledging that you're unnecessarily checking your phone -- and that there are repercussions to doing so -- is the first step toward breaking the habit.

"We can be conscious of the habit of checking. We can unlearn its habits," says Sherry Turkle, a psychologist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and director of the MIT Initiative on Technology and Self.

2. Have smartphone-free times.

See if you can stay away from your phone for a few hours. If that makes you too nervous, start off with just 10 minutes, Merlo suggests. You actually don't have to stay away from your phone altogether -- you can just turn the e-mail function off (or Facebook or whatever you're habitually checking).

3. Have smartphone-free places.

You can also establish phone-free zones, which is what Frank did to cure his smartphone habit.

"The first thing I did was banish it from the bedroom," he says. "I would have to walk down the hallway to my study to actually be able to see it."

You could also force yourself to stop checking when you're in a social situation, like out to dinner with friends. (Last Saturday night, I shoved my phone way down into my purse where I couldn't see it).

Joanna Lipari, a psychologist who practices in California, uses this strategy when her teenage daughter has friends over.

"I have a rule. Like the Old Wild West which had you check your gun at the saloon entrance, I have a basket by the door, and the kids have to check their phones in the basket," she says. Otherwise, she says, the kids would stare at their phones and not interact with one another.


















cellular

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Cell Phones

Still thinking.

The iphone has almost everything a human being (at this time) could want ... except email push.  Emails come every 15 minutes.  What if I want the email in 1 second?  Not a winner.  What if I use any Android system phone?  Not winners.  And there are a number of systems I would give body parts to have (if I was a phone) - the Xperia was the first and the best.  It was slick and cutting edge with the screens and technology, BUT when it came to America it became Android and only available with AT&T.

The iphone is perfect - large screen, pinch to make bigger or smaller, great system and great resolution.  BUT email sucks.  For people who don't care - it is perfect.  For me, I want the message in 1 second and don't find it unreasonable to expect very little time between SEND and RECEIVE.

Obviously wind, rain, snow, and servers impact the process - or mainly the servers and usage and lines and ... but still, assuming all is up and working, it should be instantaneous.

That puts me back at scratch.

Except

Blackberry is about to release a tablet (within next 4-6 weeks) that would be tethered to a smartphone, and would be a large screen, touchscreen, instant emails and messaging, and a brilliant OS with options I haven't used but might well (image / photos and videos).  More than that - I suppose I could integrate it into my life - carrying the 5x7 unit around is a bit big, but I tested out a same size width cutout I did and it fits in most coat pockets. 

The question is - do I get it or not.  Do I do the iphone, do I switch carriers and go with my first love - Xperia.  I never spent this much energy on what computer to buy or what car to buy.  In two years I can do it again, except ... it is a lot of money we spend on these things (and the service) over two years and I need to feel comfortable doing so.

Then I will be more than willing to spend the time explaining to however many hundreds of people, why it is the best.  I need the best and only the best.











phones

Saturday, March 5, 2011

In Illinois - Don't stop and take a picture of an accident

Who could possibly disagree.  This not only interferes with the process but slows traffic or causes congestion where none need exist.

On the other hand ...




Bill Would Ban Photos At Accident Scenes


March 4, 2011 6:42 AM


SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (WBBM) – A state lawmaker doesn’t want drivers to stop and take pictures or videos of vehicle accidents.


As WBBM Newsradio 780’s Alex Degman reports, a measure to ban that practice has passed an Illinois House committee.

The bill’s sponsor, state Rep. Tom Holbrook (D-Belleville), says amateur photographers often get in the way of emergency personnel.

“Putting your cell phone over the firemen’s shoulders as he’s using the jaws of life, maybe to get your grandmother of the front seat of her car while she’s bleeding,” Holbrook said. “You never know with these things. These are horrendous situations for individuals.”

Holbrook says accident victims would still be able to take pictures for insurance purposes.

But the bill says no person may use a wireless device within 500 feet of an accident, except for specified purposes.





 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
photo

Friday, February 4, 2011

iphone

On day 1 of selling Apple's (AAPL) iPhone, Verizon Wireless (VZ) sold out in just 2 hours and quit taking pre-orders Thu. night. That was a record for Verizon and ended AT&T's (T)3 years of exclusive iPhone rights. Verizon will start selling iPhones in stores Feb. 10; it could sell up to 12 mil in '11. Big iPhone subsidies could hit Verizon's profit, analysts said.




Investors Business Daily
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
cell

Thursday, February 3, 2011

Today is the Day. What to do????

Will it be the iphone or stay with Blackberry. 

Do I want to plug my phone into a computer to charge it (they have separate chargers now), do i want itunes in control, do I want apple invested on my computer (a non-apple product).  Do I want to change? 

Given all the change we have had for a couple years, I am not sure, but .... if I haven't already, there still may be time!!









iphone

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

To Blackberry or Not

I have used a Blackberry for nearly three years.  I have enjoyed the Blackberry despite the occasional system collapse somewhere at some operating hub that throws my emails into a delayed state.  I think this has happened less than a handful of times in three years.  One time it was for at least a day.  Mostly it occurs for a few hours.  Fortunately I move to the computer and access emails on the web, not much wasted or lost time. 

I started with a Tour - happy I was, but the rolling ball was a problem at times.  The grease and oil our skin naturally secretes would get in the way of the ball moving perfectly.  There were a few times when it sort of ... didn't move.  I would stare at it, imagining I was seeing something that just was not possible, and in a short bit, the ball was back to working fine.

I don't like scraped or scratched or dirty phones.  I remember the first cell phone I had - a Motorola flip phone.  It was thin and shiny and oh so thin and shiny and so perfect in shape and look.  I would set it on the podium and stare at it.  Then it got old and dirty and scratched and tarnished and ... I wanted a new phone.  Not because it didn't work, but because it was not the perfectly functioning phone I wanted. 

I went in to Best Buy (where I bought the Tour) and traded it in  (after 5-6 months) for another (I have a protection plan where I pay $10 a month and have some sort of insurance) Tour.  I had that second Tour until October 2010 - about 20 months.  I dropped it (perhaps subconsciously) from my desk chair to the floor (a distance of 13 inches or so) and the screen / glass cracked inside and there was no image.  I went back to Best Buy and wanted a newer BB ... they had a pitiful collection of phones to choose from.  I went with a Motorola Droid.  I actually liked it - the look, the screens, the maneuvering between screens and applications.  I did not like the fact that if I wanted email instantly I needed a google email account.  I use other emails NOT google.  The email receive was set at the quickest time of 15 minutes.  If it was a google email it would arrive in seconds.  I would have to get a google email, forward all my email from my 3-4 email accounts to the google, in order to get emails quickly (assuming all the forwarding went well).    Not gonna happen.  This rules out the android systems.

  : (  and to think the phone I have lusted after Xperia uses the Android system.  If I was a phone, I would want to marry the Xperia.  I have lusted after it since the original Xperia came out and was not available to US customers.

Back to phones - so if I won't use GOOGLE and ANDROID, I have few options left.  Blackberry has some newer phones - Torch and Storm.  Torch is not carried by my carrier and I really do not like AT&T (for a half dozen reasons or more).  That leaves me with the best BB my carrier has - Storm2.  Seems like I am settling for, rather than eagerly embracing.  I do like the BB.  The communications - email, text, BB Messenger ... brilliant.  But there are some downsides -

- the keys are really small - this is in part, part of the BB experience, I understand, BUT ... as the population ages, do you think 40-70 year olds will want such tiny keys that require lights and glasses to see the buttons?  I don't think so ... not at all.
- the screen is really small (yes you can enlarge the font but that is tedious when you must use the trackball thing to get to the end of the line or skip lines or ...)


Solve those two and I am forever.

Well, the touchscreen does that, sort of.

The buttons are bigger (screen size now) and the screen is bigger.  I am not sure about the sizing - whether you can make the image larger using your fingers a la Droid / iphone.

This is where I am stuck and I didn't get the Verizon guy to argue in BB's favor when I spoke to him today.  He seemed to sigh and quietly agreed that there were no BB's that could compete with the iphone and ... maybe I should try it.  

I watched a video of the iphone - it reminded me of my first cell phone.  Thin, sleek, shiny.  

February 3, 2011 - Verizon customers can go to the Verizon webpage and pre-order the iphone for either $199 or $299.  The phone will be sent out on February 10 - at the time it will go into stores.  I will get the phone 2-3 days after it is in stores (if it is even available in a given store). 

So what to do.  If I leave BB it is not like I can ever go back, I don't do 'going back' ... leaving is a permanent thing for me, I never look back once I make the decision.  Just part of my dysfunctional personality.  Besides - the time.  Oh my good golly - I spent at least 30 hours getting the Android phone up to par - with all my stuff in it, rings, pictures and to a point where I understood it.  When the Tour broke and I had to accept a Curve ... it took easily 4-5 hours over a day or two, to get it all sorted out, maybe longer.  I don't have 20 hours to spend just getting ready to use something.  So I really have to decide and when I jump in, I can't turn around - I can't waste time and then turn around and throw all that wasted time out again.

I am aware that Blackberry is about to come out with a thing, I am at a loss, to compete with the ipad.  The ipad is great - email, internet.  But no phone.  Much too big for a pocket or carrying around ... I'd lose it.  I'd set it down and forget.  It is an interesting idea, and here is another idea ...

- why not make it a phone also, and have a bluetooth that pops out (like those pens for the laptop screens to write on).  The bluetooth charges when it is in the spot, insert into ear, make the call, surf the web, check email, texts ... it might work. 

What do I want in a phone.  Small - say no bigger than the iphone in width, length or weight.  Give or take a few grams or a 1/4 inch in length or width. I would accept the Droid size or less, the Torch or Storm size. 

Screen resolution - All the smart phones seem to be 480 x 360 up to 800.  So increase the resolution a little.  It doesn't have to be 960 x 640, but more than 480 x 320.

Camera - I think 5 MP is fine.

Better battery - the iphone apparently has a bigger battery for longer life.  So make your batteries for a longer life period.  Do something and make it so.

OS - NO Android.  I don't like google.  Google search and google news - great tools.  Google Android - NO.  Google email - no.  Instead, let's go with the Blackberry OS or Windows OS or iOS ... one of those 3 systems would be fine.

Large screen - the Droid is a great size - 4.3 inches. 

Email - superior service, immediate delivery for whatever  - email / texting / SMS/MMS.  In fact, if it isn't Blackberry, whoever makes this phone should create an IM type service that would work with other products (same service provider).  That the emails are seamless - everything from Bob is listed under Bob and subject matter listed under same subject or you can order it by 'received' (as it is possible now with Outlook or webmail).  That instead of making a folder invisible - that all emails appear in one email box and when you reply - you are replying from whatever email service you received it from.

Phone - whatever - able to call and hear - not much to ask

Bigger buttons and or touchscreen.  I know issues exist with touchscreens.  So, either compartmentalize the entire screen so when one thing goes it doesn't require the whole phone to be tossed or fix the issues.

Screen / images - able to pinch and expand images/text.


Is there such a phone?  I want it if there is, and if there isn't, I think the BB market would be willing to give up whatever BB they have for such a phone because it combines the best of all phones, in a new better phone.

The other thing - don't charge $599 for a phone we know costs MUCH less.  The phone company gives a discount (except iphones) of 200 if you sign up for 2 years, and then the mfg throws in a 50 rebate and if you are eligible they knock off 50% ... but you pay tax on the original amount - nearly $60.  Whereas if we sold the phone for what it cost plus 100% profit, the phone would be MUCH MUCH less and the TAX would be MUCH MUCH less.  I know this, almost seems like the cell phone companies and the government got together to come up with a way to get as much money out of us ....

Anyway.


So what to do???




I have 8 days to decide.


















cell phones

Monday, July 5, 2010

To Blackberry or Not to Blackberry

What are the reasons why I should keep the Blackberry?
- communicate with friends via Messenger
 * Yes except a few of my friends do not use smartphones, those who do have such things have the iphone,   and the one or two people I know with Blackberry rarely message me.

- it's a nice phone (the Tour)
*  Yes except so are all the phones I look at.  The Droid by Motorola was pretty cool, a little heavy, and now, virtually antiquated in less than a year.  The Droid Incredible changed all that - a cool toy again, does everything a Smartphone needs to do and a MUCH bigger screen than the Tour.

- you can update it or synch it with your computer files
* and you can with other phones or soon enough you will be able to.  Not enough reason to buy the BB.  Every time I synch it, I end up with doubles.  I tell it to add anything questionable because I don't want to go through each item one at a time.  Apparently I do not think alike when I use the BB and the computer because I have hundreds of additions which are actually duplicates.

- the BB server goes down randomly. 
* It goes down for everyone.  Except it isn't the antenna nor the battery life, it is the BB server wherever that might be.

- Battery life
* So short.  And then we get these wise comments such as: make sure everything is closed.  Oh, then lets not put everything on the phone.  Yes, like a computer you use up RAM when everything is running together, so why doesn't RIM come up with a little switch that informs the user they are gobbling up battery life like it was gasoline and it was 1950.

- Google maps v Android
* When you use the Droid Google maps and traffic are included with no charge.  Even on Verizon.  For the BB - no such luck.  I have to use Verizon Navigator and pay their fees.

- BB is stylish
* Oh and I care a whole lot about that - NOT.   I originally wanted the Sony Ericson X1 (although by now it may be on version X10.  I fell for X1 and the X2 and that was maybe a year or so ago.)  Talk about stylish.  I doubt anything can beat SE.  But the cost and I suppose BB is on the lower end of that range ... way down actually.  Anyone and their brother can afford a BB now.


I am not sure.  The Tour is fine, but.

We'll see what January brings.








cell phones

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Obama and the Cell Phones: No Expectation of Privacy

Oops there goes another one, oops there goes another ... ooops there goes ......




Feds push for tracking cell phones

by Declan McCullagh
February 11, 2010 4:00 AM PST
Cnet.com


Two years ago, when the FBI was stymied by a band of armed robbers known as the "Scarecrow Bandits" that had robbed more than 20 Texas banks, it came up with a novel method of locating the thieves.

FBI agents obtained logs from mobile phone companies corresponding to what their cellular towers had recorded at the time of a dozen different bank robberies in the Dallas area. The voluminous records showed that two phones had made calls around the time of all 12 heists, and that those phones belonged to men named Tony Hewitt and Corey Duffey. A jury eventually convicted the duo of multiple bank robbery and weapons charges.

Even though police are tapping into the locations of mobile phones thousands of times a year, the legal ground rules remain unclear, and federal privacy laws written a generation ago are ambiguous at best. On Friday, the first federal appeals court to consider the topic will hear oral arguments (PDF) in a case that could establish new standards for locating wireless devices.

In that case, the Obama administration has argued that warrantless tracking is permitted because Americans enjoy no "reasonable expectation of privacy" in their--or at least their cell phones'--whereabouts. U.S. Department of Justice lawyers say that "a customer's Fourth Amendment rights are not violated when the phone company reveals to the government its own records" that show where a mobile device placed and received calls.

Those claims have alarmed the ACLU and other civil liberties groups, which have opposed the Justice Department's request and plan to tell the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelphia that Americans' privacy deserves more protection and judicial oversight than what the administration has proposed.

"This is a critical question for privacy in the 21st century," says Kevin Bankston, an attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation who will be arguing on Friday. "If the courts do side with the government, that means that everywhere we go, in the real world and online, will be an open book to the government unprotected by the Fourth Amendment."

Not long ago, the concept of tracking cell phones would have been the stuff of spy movies. In 1998's "Enemy of the State," Gene Hackman warned that the National Security Agency has "been in bed with the entire telecommunications industry since the '40s--they've infected everything." After a decade of appearances in "24" and "Live Free or Die Hard," location-tracking has become such a trope that it was satirized in a scene with Seth Rogen from "Pineapple Express" (2008).

Once a Hollywood plot, now 'commonplace'

Whether state and federal police have been paying attention to Hollywood, or whether it was the other way around, cell phone tracking has become a regular feature in criminal investigations. It comes in two forms: police obtaining retrospective data kept by mobile providers for their own billing purposes that may not be very detailed, or prospective data that reveals the minute-by-minute location of a handset or mobile device.

Obtaining location details is now "commonplace," says Al Gidari, a partner in the Seattle offices of Perkins Coie who represents wireless carriers. "It's in every pen register order these days."

Gidari says that the Third Circuit case could have a significant impact on police investigations within the court's jurisdiction, namely Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania; it could be persuasive beyond those states. But, he cautions, "if the privacy groups win, the case won't be over. It will certainly be appealed."

CNET was the first to report on prospective tracking in a 2005 news article. In a subsequent Arizona case, agents from the Drug Enforcement Administration tracked a tractor trailer with a drug shipment through a GPS-equipped Nextel phone owned by the suspect. Texas DEA agents have used cell site information in real time to locate a Chrysler 300M driving from Rio Grande City to a ranch about 50 miles away. Verizon Wireless and T-Mobile logs showing the location of mobile phones at the time calls became evidence in a Los Angeles murder trial.

And a mobile phone's fleeting connection with a remote cell tower operated by Edge Wireless is what led searchers to the family of the late James Kim, a CNET employee who died in the Oregon wilderness in 2006 after leaving a snowbound car to seek help.

The way tracking works is simple: mobile phones are miniature radio transmitters and receivers. A cellular tower knows the general direction of a mobile phone (many cell sites have three antennas pointing in different directions), and if the phone is talking to multiple towers, triangulation yields a rough location fix. With this method, accuracy depends in part on the density of cell sites.

The Federal Communications Commission's "Enhanced 911" (E911) requirements allowed rough estimates to be transformed into precise coordinates. Wireless carriers using CDMA networks, such as Verizon Wireless and Sprint Nextel, tend to use embedded GPS technology to fulfill E911 requirements. AT&T and T-Mobile comply with E911 regulations using network-based technology that computes a phone's location using signal analysis and triangulation between towers.

T-Mobile, for instance, uses a GSM technology called Uplink Time Difference of Arrival, or U-TDOA, which calculates a position based on precisely how long it takes signals to reach towers. A company called TruePosition, which provides U-TDOA services to T-Mobile, boasts of "accuracy to under 50 meters" that's available "for start-of-call, midcall, or when idle."

A 2008 court order to T-Mobile in a criminal investigation of a marriage fraud scheme, which was originally sealed and later made public, says: "T-Mobile shall disclose at such intervals and times as directed by (the Department of Homeland Security), latitude and longitude data that establishes the approximate positions of the Subject Wireless Telephone, by unobtrusively initiating a signal on its network that will enable it to determine the locations of the Subject Wireless Telephone."

'No reasonable expectation of privacy'

In the case that's before the Third Circuit on Friday, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, or ATF, said it needed historical (meaning stored, not future) phone location information because a set of suspects "use their wireless telephones to arrange meetings and transactions in furtherance of their drug trafficking activities."

U.S. Magistrate Judge Lisa Lenihan in Pennsylvania denied the Justice Department's attempt to obtain stored location data without a search warrant; prosecutors had invoked a different legal procedure. Lenihan's ruling, in effect, would require police to obtain a search warrant based on probable cause--a more privacy-protective standard.

Lenihan's opinion (PDF)--which, in an unusual show of solidarity, was signed by four other magistrate judges--noted that location information can reveal sensitive information such as health treatments, financial difficulties, marital counseling, and extra-marital affairs.

In its appeal to the Third Circuit, the Justice Department claims that Lenihan's opinion "contains, and relies upon, numerous errors" and should be overruled. In addition to a search warrant not being necessary, prosecutors said, because location "records provide only a very general indication of a user's whereabouts at certain times in the past, the requested cell-site records do not implicate a Fourth Amendment privacy interest."

The Obama administration is not alone in making this argument. U.S. District Judge William Pauley, a Clinton appointee in New York, wrote in a 2009 opinion that a defendant in a drug trafficking case, Jose Navas, "did not have a legitimate expectation of privacy in the cell phone" location. That's because Navas only used the cell phone "on public thoroughfares en route from California to New York" and "if Navas intended to keep the cell phone's location private, he simply could have turned it off."

(Most cases have involved the ground rules for tracking cell phone users prospectively, and judges have disagreed over what legal rules apply. Only a minority has sided with the Justice Department, however.)

Cellular providers tend not to retain moment-by-moment logs of when each mobile device contacts the tower, in part because there's no business reason to store the data, and in part because the storage costs would be prohibitive. They do, however, keep records of what tower is in use when a call is initiated or answered--and those records are generally stored for six months to a year, depending on the company.

Verizon Wireless keeps "phone records including cell site location for 12 months," Drew Arena, Verizon's vice president and associate general counsel for law enforcement compliance, said at a federal task force meeting in Washington, D.C. last week. Arena said the company keeps "phone bills without cell site location for seven years," and stores SMS text messages for only a very brief time.

Gidari, the Seattle attorney, said that wireless carriers have recently extended how long they store this information. "Prior to a year or two ago when location-based services became more common, if it were 30 days it would be surprising," he said.

The ACLU, EFF, the Center for Democracy and Technology, and University of San Francisco law professor Susan Freiwald argue that the wording of the federal privacy law in question allows judges to require the level of proof required for a search warrant "before authorizing the disclosure of particularly novel or invasive types of information." In addition, they say, Americans do not "knowingly expose their location information and thereby surrender Fourth Amendment protection whenever they turn on or use their cell phones."

"The biggest issue at stake is whether or not courts are going to accept the government's minimal view of what is protected by the Fourth Amendment," says EFF's Bankston. "The government is arguing that based on precedents from the 1970s, any record held by a third party about us, no matter how invasively collected, is not protected by the Fourth Amendment."

Update 10:37 a.m. PT: A source inside the U.S. Attorney's Office for the northern district of Texas, which prosecuted the Scarecrow Bandits mentioned in the above article, tells me that this was the first and the only time that the FBI has used the location-data-mining technique to nab bank robbers. It's also worth noting that the leader of this gang, Corey Duffey, was sentenced last month to 354 years (not months, but years) in prison. Another member is facing 140 years in prison.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
cell phones

Monday, January 4, 2010

Phones and Neighbors

I was talking to my neighbor about cell phones and asking his opinion on what he belives is best.  Neighbours are such a funny lot - chatty at times and reclusive at others.  Unfortunately, I always have someone outside.  With 4-5 houses surrounding me ina horseshoe shape, someone is always around.


While we talked about cell phones, he asked me what I thought of an internet gossip person - I knew the name vaguely, from people who had raised the name in my presence - so I told him: (from the bottom up) I find people who live to gossip about other people to be some of the lowest forms of life on earth.  He seemed aghast at my subtleties and further queiried me - so tell me what you really think of gossip columnists online or in the paper or television .  So I told him very clearly so as not to be vague or ambiguous about my feelings - terrorists and child murderers/rapists/peadophiles are at the bottom of my list, above which are murderers (of anyone but children), rapists, and other serious felons.  Bad governments - Chinese or Cuban, Venezuela, or Vietnamese, North Korea, Iranian ... bad leaders rank just below the rapists and around the murderers level.  People who steal your property or income followed by gossip hounds.


People who live to talk about others, either to put them down or champion some retarded cause, are insecure not only about themselves, their childhood, their reason for living, they have very little value to us - the mass of humanity.  They procure silliness and weakness from slimeballs and shitheads, wrap it up and tell us all about it - as if 1) we need to know, 2) we should care, 3) it matters, 4) it is anyone's business ...  Bugger off is a reasonable expectation.  I wish, for each and every person who indulges in the 'industry' of gossip - crippling arthritis, speech impediments, and an inexplicable need for oxygen tanks.  My neighbor asked me how could be so cruel?  Honestly, in a world where up is down and down is up - I don't care whether or not it is cruel - because it is cruel only to him and two dozen other people who have been kicked in the head, one too many times by their mothers.  For the rest of us, it would be serving a greater good- much like the hospital evaluations teams that will be coming your way thanks to Obama - to determine whether or not the government should spend the $15,000 on your surgery or if it would be put to better use helping an illegal alien who is 20 years old.  After all, he has 60 years of hard labor ahead of him.  You ... less useful.


After we finished with the gossip topic, he asked me what I thought of Obama's ratings - they seemed to be falling faster than a rock from space (ok, not quite as fast):  I told the neighbor that occasionally the people get it right and occasionally we get it wrong.  Sometimes when we get it wrong, we learn quickly (Jimmy Carter), but we have to live out the rest of his term.  Sometimes when we get it wrong (Johnson), we feel bad for the guy and elect him because he has some connection to something larger than our individual self, offering us a change from the past yet a connection to what we believed we valued.  Then we accept it and trudge through praying for a miracle - perhaps Congress will see the light and act in accordance with the wishes of the American people.  My neighbor was unsure of what I thought of Obama, by the end of this discussion, so we changed topics - cell phones.


I told my neighbor - Barry is his name, that I want the Xperia.  I had wanted the Xperia 1 but they are now a generation away from that version.  I believe they are on Xperia 10 ... even better, and more money. In any case, it is my dream phone.  For now, a Blackberry.  I can't complain too much - Canada, Waterloo, if I am not mistaken.  Practically American except they speak funny.  I always thought it was a good phone, but since phone companies decided it was more fun to charge nearly $30 for access, hard to imagine two phones X $30 = $60 just for access plus the costs.  Too much.  Not a Blackberry issue so much as a carrier issue, but still.   Next on the maybe list is the Motorola Android.  It is the iphone, but heavier and less sleek.  It is the Xperia but not as extravagant and options laden.  The iphone will be made available, hopefully this year, and maybe ... maybe.   My neighbor has the Motorola Android - he likes it.


By this time, it was getting dark and cold and I was finished.  I said goodbye and came inside.  Bed time for Bonzo.









nothing

Monday, November 30, 2009

Sony Ericsson Xperia 3

The newest phone from the Cadillac of cell phones.

X3.

Uses the Android system.

It would seem to be a phenomenal system.

Nancy, instead of flowers for a year, I could do with this phone!  Put it on the American people's tab!  Why not, everything else is.  At least I will enjoy the phone.







cell phones

Sunday, October 19, 2008

You will need a passport to ... get a phone!

From The Sunday Times
October 19, 2008


Passports will be needed to buy mobile phones


Everyone who buys a mobile telephone will be forced to register their identity on a national database under government plans to extend massively the powers of state surveillance.

Phone buyers would have to present a passport or other official form of identification at the point of purchase. Privacy campaigners fear it marks the latest government move to create a surveillance society.

A compulsory national register for the owners of all 72m mobile phones in Britain would be part of a much bigger database to combat terrorism and crime. Whitehall officials have raised the idea of a register containing the names and addresses of everyone who buys a phone in recent talks with Vodafone and other telephone companies, insiders say.

The move is targeted at monitoring the owners of Britain’s estimated 40m prepaid mobile phones. They can be purchased with cash by customers who do not wish to give their names, addresses or credit card details.






UK



Britain

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.