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Your cellphone is telling your secrets
Posted : 15 May, 2012 11:48 AM

MSN ~ 5 /14/2012 8:03 PM ET ~ By Jennifer Waters, MarketWatch

Your cellphone is telling your secrets

Your phone knows where you go, whom you talk to, what you text, even when you shop. And it�s a total tattletale. Find out what it says.

Your cellphone is the enemy.

Sure, it connects you with people, the Internet, stupid games and even your bank account. But it's also a tracking device that your family, your favorite retailer and virtually any law-enforcement agency in the world can use to find you.

And you're complicit in helping them do so. By keeping your phone on, you are letting any number of people have access to private information about you that you might not think you're giving out.

Sometimes you're putting the information into pretty packages by signing into sites like Foursquare -- which is linked to your Facebook account -- when you enter a restaurant, a bar, even a church.

Cellphones and ID theft

"Location information can reveal a great deal about a person," said Catherine Crump, a staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union.

It can show who you're friends with, what medical offices you visit, what organizations you belong to and, in worst-case situations, where you've been when you don't want to be found.

And, just like you see on the TV crime shows, the longer your cell phone is tracked, the more information about you is uncovered.

Consider the uproar around the controversial "Girls Around Me" app for iPhones that looked to some like a stalking tool. The developers, in a long-winded response to The Wall Street Journal in March, said the app was meant only "to make geo-social exploration of popular venues easy and visual."

It did so by using publicly available data from Foursquare and Facebook to tell users which bars and nightclubs, for example, were hot on a particular night.

It was billed as a go-to tool for guys looking for hot chicks who used Foursquare to see where they checked in on a given map area. In fact, the app would note anyone, male or female, who had checked in at places in the vicinity.

Not only would users know who was where but, through public information posted on Facebook pages, the users in some cases were able to find out a girl's name, what she looked like, her birthdate, where she went to school and worked, who she might be with and any number of things that people share through social media sites. What's more, the girls had no idea they were being tracked that way.

(After Foursquare cut off access to the app, the developer pulled it but said it would continue to tweak it and plans to reintroduce it.)

That underscores the conundrum with your cellphone: While it makes it convenient to find your friends, directions or the weather, you give up a little piece of your privacy each time you use it.

"Your cellphone is your best friend who is a tattletale," said Mike Gikas, a senior electronics editor at Consumer Reports. "It's there for you, it comforts you, it gets you stuff -- but then it tells the world about it. And the more you tell it, the more it's going to share," he added.

*** I�m not a Conspiracy kinda gal�however�facts are facts�ifin someone �wants� to find ya�they can�I prefer privacy so I don�t use Facebook, MySpace�etc�etc�etc�heck�I don�t even have Cable or Dish�xo

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Your cellphone is telling your secrets
Posted : 15 May, 2012 08:38 PM

All of this can be found with common sense and a little bit of internet detective work. The cell phone doesn't cause it (though it makes it easier), and it only does so with your permission. Personally, I don't care if someone knows I am Starbucks five times in one day, because it's a public place and someone is just as likely to see me there. Five. Times. In one day.



People give away all this "telling" information and more to anyone who wants to pay attention.

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