New documents reveal ‘huge’ scale of US government’s cell phone location data 
tracking 
https://share.newsbreak.com/1gh2bhod

"It’s no secret that U.S. government agencies have been obtaining and using 
location data collected by Americans’ smartphones. In early 2020, a Wall Street 
Journal report revealed that both Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and 
Customs and Border Protection (CBP) bought access to millions of smartphone 
users’ location data to track undocumented immigrants and suspected tax dodgers.

"However, new documents obtained by the ACLU through an ongoing Freedom of 
Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit now reveal the extent of this warrantless data 
collection. The 6,000-plus records reviewed by the civil rights organization 
contained approximately 336,000 location points across North America obtained 
from people’s phones. They also reveal that in just three days in 2018, CBP 
obtained records containing around 113,654 location points in the southwestern 
United States — more than 26 location points per minute.

"The bulk of the data that CBP obtained came from its contract with Venntel, a 
location data broker that aggregates and sells information quietly siphoned 
from smartphone apps. By purchasing this data from data brokers, officials are 
sidestepping the legal process government officials would typically need to go 
through in order to access cell phone data.

"Documents also detail the government agencies’ efforts to rationalize their 
actions. For example, cell phone location data is characterized as containing 
no personally identifying information (PII) in the records obtained by ACLU, 
despite enabling officials to track specific individuals or everyone in a 
particular area. Similarly, the records also claim that this data is “100 
percent opt-in” and that cell phone users “voluntarily” share the location 
information. But many don’t realize that apps installed on their phones are 
collecting GPS information, let alone share that data with the government.

Reply via email to