backtop


Print E-mail del.icio.us 21 comment(s) - last by lggj.. on Jun 11 at 7:55 PM

New study may be a violation of ethics principles

Cell phone location tracking is no longer just the domain of emergency services and shadowy government investigations. New research from a group of scientists at Northeastern University in Boston say they've practically struck gold with cell phones, using their location-tracking features to draw conclusions about 100,000 subscribers to an undisclosed European cell provider.

The study, titled "Understanding Individual Human Mobility Patterns" and published in the latest edition of the journal Nature, sought to figure out where people go throughout their day. Scientists have previously struggled with the task, as tracking something as "ephemeral" as peoples' movements in a reliable, non-intrusive method proves to be highly difficult. Cell phones and the location-tracking data that telcos collect on them as people move near different towers, seems to have bridged this gap. People are generally never far from their phones, and their location-tracking traits are completely passive so much that many people aren't even aware they are being tracked.

"Slices of our behavior are preserved in these electronic data sets," said project director Albert-László Barabási. "This is creating huge opportunities for science."

Privacy groups are not sitting easy with the study's methods, however. Marc Rotenberg, president and founder of the Electronic Privacy Information Center in Washington D.C., called the study "troubling," noting that it "raises questions about the protection of privacy in physical spaces, when devices make possible the capture of locational data."

Ethically, the study exists in a gray area as well. The study's "participants" -- the 100,000 subscribers of the undisclosed European country -- were not informed of their participation. While scientists are generally allowed to observe people in public areas, examining location-tracking data is a new development in the research world and has yet to be classified one way or another.

The researchers say that they received dataset with personal information scrambled out, from a telephone company that was obligated to collect location-tracking information for other reasons. Further, they say their data is only as precise as the nearest cell tower -- and that it only shows information from when someone uses cell service, like sending a text message or receiving a phone call.

Despite their privacy precautions, however, the researchers acknowledge that most people's movements are so predictable that they can reasonably forecast the likelihood of someone being in a particular spot, regardless of how obfuscated their phone number is.

"Individuals display significant regularity, because they return to a few highly frequented locations, such as home or work," reads the paper.

While peoples' propensity for going to and from the same locations seems like an obvious conclusion, similar research has been confined to methods far less accurate. A previous paper, written by a physics professor Dirk Brockmann at Northwestern University, tracked people using data from dollar-tracking site wheresgeorge.com. It too reached a similar conclusion regarding people's lack of variation, but Brockmann's research was limited because, unlike cell phones, currency is rapidly passed around.

"Dollar bills diffuse, but humans do not," noted the Northeastern study.

The article in Nature notes that good data on human movements is useful to a number of fields. Urban planners can better allocate projects and resources to where people actually go, and epidemiologists can better track the spread of viruses and other threats.

"This is a new step for science," said Barabási. "For the first time we have a chance to really objectively follow certain aspects of human behavior."



Comments     Threshold


This article is over a month old, voting and posting comments is disabled

Privacy in public
By djc208 on 6/10/2008 9:41:41 AM , Rating: 1
We all understand the privacy concerns with all this electronic data floating around, but I have trouble seeing the "rite to privacy" in this. You're walking around with a radio-transmitter strapped to your person, god forbid someone uses it to find you.

Actually I thought that was why we all value our cell phones so much, anyone can find you at any time. These would probably be the same people complaining about lack of cell service. At least the scientists don't know where you are then.




RE: Privacy in public
By SlyNine on 6/10/2008 10:27:15 AM , Rating: 5
You have windows on you're home, They are not there so people can peek threw at night.

Cell phones are not their so they can sit in a room and monitor what you do, Nor should it be legal to digitally stalk you as you go about your daily routines.


RE: Privacy in public
By FITCamaro on 6/10/2008 10:37:02 AM , Rating: 1
The government has better things to do. If the government actually ever cared about you, they could find you without a cell phone. Doing it through a cell phone only makes it easier for them. And the ability to find your location via cell phone has been around for years. Long before GPS features were being touted on phones.


RE: Privacy in public
By Reclaimer77 on 6/10/2008 4:36:10 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
The government has better things to do.


Well, ours yes. Europe ? Not so much.

Notice the Bush bashers who constantly come here and freak out over all the " rights " hes taking away don't show up when its another example of European fascism disregarding its citizens privacy.


RE: Privacy in public
By ATWindsor on 6/11/2008 2:26:18 AM , Rating: 2
Hehe, thats intereseting, alot of people in my country seems to think its the other way around. I think it comes from the fact that europe has a lot of diffrent countries. A lot of people in europe are worried about the extremeness of surveilance in Gret Britain. Wich IMHO is pretty bad. So I guess it all depends on wich country in europe one compares too.


RE: Privacy in public
By mindless1 on 6/11/2008 1:00:04 AM , Rating: 2
Yes easier, as-in, depending on who you are and why they want to find you, it could be a good or bad thing that it is easier for them.

Do they have better things to do? Like what? Monitoring phone calls without warrants and scanning email? We'd have to be paranoid to suggest such a thing right? Well at least until it was admittedly done, then we have the next and next thing we are so "sure" won't happen, right? Erosion of liberty happens one small step at a time. This isn't an anti-government sentiment, but when speaking of a large group of people in government office, some are inherantly imperfect in their decisions and actions just like in any other group of people.


RE: Privacy in public
By abzillah1 on 6/10/2008 1:00:32 PM , Rating: 2
They can track me all they want, I have nothing to hide. People can go ahead and look through my window into my room too; in the day or in the night, I have nothing to hide.
(Sarcasm.......)


RE: Privacy in public
By vhx on 6/10/2008 5:05:04 PM , Rating: 2
Thoughts like that are why countries like Europe are getting screwed over in rights. Pathetic. The US is next on the chopping block.

You seem to take bending over quite well.


RE: Privacy in public
By bdewong on 6/10/2008 1:46:42 PM , Rating: 2
Hmmm, I guess windows are a good comparison. If you are leaving your windows open at night, people can definitely peek in. Sure, you may want to look at the stars, just realize that someone can look back at you.

The same is true for a cell phone. You may want people to be able to contact you, just realize that your position can be tracked if it's on.


RE: Privacy in public
By SlyNine on 6/10/2008 7:51:32 PM , Rating: 2
It's possible for them to do that, I'm just saying it's not legal for them to sit there and watch you threw your window. It should not be legal for these guys to track your movements threw your Cell phone.

Now I know these people are not Identifying anyone they are just tracking human behavior for statistics, Witch I'm not against. I guess I just have mixed fillings on this one.

But I am definitely against monitoring individuals and using this information ( without court order) against them or just to track them.


RE: Privacy in public
By cherrycoke on 6/11/2008 3:33:45 PM , Rating: 2
I wasn't going to say anything, but after three times...

Threw =/= Through


RE: Privacy in public
By FITCamaro on 6/10/2008 10:34:37 AM , Rating: 1
Exactly. People have phones because they want people to be able to get ahold of them. I find it odd that they only care when the government might want to use that ability. If it was a friend or relative, it'd be fine though.


RE: Privacy in public
By eye smite on 6/10/2008 11:11:57 AM , Rating: 2
Ya know, if they ask your permission to track your activities during the day while you move about that's one thing. If they do so without you knowing, that's unethical. You say people have celphones so other people can contact them or know where they're at, yeah that's true as long as you give them the PHONE NUMBER. Broaden your mind, have another beer.


I thought this would be the other way around?
By MBlueD on 6/10/2008 6:46:28 AM , Rating: 2
"Urban planners can better allocate projects and resources to where people actually go"




RE: I thought this would be the other way around?
By AlvinCool on 6/10/2008 8:38:32 AM , Rating: 3
Right the Starsucks goes here and the McDoogle goes there. Technology saves us yet again


RE: I thought this would be the other way around?
By pnyffeler on 6/10/2008 9:33:42 AM , Rating: 2
Be careful what you write. I'm a scientist, & I know where you are </sarcasm>


By AlvinCool on 6/10/2008 11:54:39 AM , Rating: 2
Apparently you and every other researcher in the world. What you don't know is I gave my cell phone to the mailman. OH NO, I've been slapped with 10 paternity suits based on my cell movements. Woe is me

Seriously, if they use them like this when does your being in an area make you a victim of circumstance?


The answer
By jimbojimbo on 6/10/2008 3:25:22 PM , Rating: 2
Pay with cash: Disposable cell phones




RE: The answer
By mindless1 on 6/11/2008 12:55:27 AM , Rating: 2
Might put you at the top of the list of "people we need to track just to see what they're up to needing a disposable cell phone".


Duh
By The Irish Patient on 6/10/2008 1:02:41 PM , Rating: 2
quote:
"Individuals display significant regularity, because they return to a few highly frequented locations, such as home or work," reads the paper.




"Privacy mode" ?
By lggj on 6/11/2008 7:55:18 PM , Rating: 2
Rather than turning your phone off, maybe cellphone mfgrs need to start making phones with a "Privacy" button. Then, your phone could act like a pager (receive only), and if you need to reply to a call, you could then turn the privacy button OFF, and answer the call?




"Paying an extra $500 for a computer in this environment -- same piece of hardware -- paying $500 more to get a logo on it? I think that's a more challenging proposition for the average person than it used to be." -- Steve Ballmer











botimage
Copyright 2009 DailyTech LLC. - RSS Feed | Advertise | About Us | Ethics | FAQ | Terms, Conditions & Privacy Information | Kristopher Kubicki