When you're in spots like Russia where paranoia about surveillance runs deep, 
the best thing to do is simply take the battery out of your cell phone. In 
recent months, there have been people killed by cellphones:
Korean Man killed by exploding cell phones:
http://www.slashgear.com/man-in-korea-killed-288746.php

and of course cases of industrial espionage, credit card fraud, and the 
humorous cracking of Paris Hilton's blue tooth applications to get access to 
her cell phones text messages, celebrity phone numbers and porn photos:
http://www.tabloidcolumn.com/paris-hilton-hacked.html

but this is just daily routine. When G.P.S coordinates can be used in court, 
you have an update on how people can think of locative artforms: when being 
invisible becomes a strength.
The GPS uses a constellation of between 24 and 32 Medium Earth Orbit satellites 
that transmit precise microwave signals, that enable GPS receivers to determine 
their location, speed, direction, and time. But if you edit the data sets that 
the satellites use, various streets, landmarks, and of course, people, can be 
edited into and out of the reality being scripted. Another artform?
Paul


Police Using G.P.S. Units as Evidence in Crimes
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/31/us/31gps.html?ref=us


By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Published: August 31, 2008

Like millions of motorists, Eric Hanson used a Global Positioning System device 
in his Chevrolet TrailBlazer to find his way around. He probably did not expect 
that prosecutors would use it, too — to help convict him of killing four family 
members.

Prosecutors in suburban Chicago analyzed data from the Garmin G.P.S. device to 
pinpoint where Mr. Hanson had been on the morning after his parents were 
fatally shot and his sister and brother-in-law bludgeoned to death in 2005. He 
was convicted of the killings this year and sentenced to death.

Mr. Hanson’s trial was among recent criminal cases in which the authorities 
used such navigation devices to help establish a defendant’s whereabouts. 
Experts say such evidence will almost certainly become more common in court as 
the systems become more affordable and show up in more vehicles.

“There’s no real doubt,” said Alan Brill, a computer forensics expert in 
Minnesota who has worked with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the 
Secret Service. “This follows every other technology that turns out to have 
information of forensic value. I think what we’re seeing is evolutionary.”

Using technology to track a person’s location is nothing new, but the 
popularity of the Global Positioning System — in cars, cellphones and other 
handheld devices — gives the authorities a powerful tool to track suspects.

In September, a man in Butte, Mont., pleaded guilty to rape after a judge ruled 
that evidence from the global positioning unit in his car could be used against 
him at trial. Prosecutors planned to use it to show that the man, Brian D. 
Adolf, “prowled” in the town looking for a victim.

In New Brighton, Pa., a trucker’s system led the police to charge him with 
setting his own home on fire. The system’s records showed his rig was parked 
about 100 yards from his house at the time of the fire.

Critics, however, say the police should be allowed to acquire global 
positioning data only by getting a warrant. Renée Hutchins, a University of 
Maryland law professor, wrote an article recently suggesting Global Positioning 
System data was protected under the Fourth Amendment.

“I think that in the last couple of years,” Ms. Hutchins said, “people are 
starting to be aware that if they have these units in their car, people can 
keep track of you. I think it’s a growing public awareness. The problem is that 
most people feel like, ‘I’m not doing anything wrong, so who cares?’ But I 
think that’s the wrong way of looking at it.”

Developed for the military, the navigation devices started showing up in cars 
in the 1990s. Prices have dropped sharply in the past few years, and many units 
cost less than $150. The Consumer Electronics Association estimates that 20 
percent of American households own a portable Global Positioning System unit 
and that 9 percent have vehicles equipped with in-dash systems.


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