One Dope Moke: Imagine paying for someone to snitch you out...mean.
Imagine paying for someone to snitch you out...mean.
Sprint handed customer GPS data to law enforcement over 8 million times last year
Privacy advocates and career criminals
alike are in a lather over reports that between September 2008 and
October 2009, Sprint Nextel ponied up customer location data to various
law enforcement agencies more than 8 million times. Speaking at ISS
World 2009 (a conference for law enforcement and telecom industry-types
responsible for "lawful interception, electronic investigations and
network Intelligence gathering"), Sprint Nextel's very own Paul Taylor,
Manager of Electronic Surveillance, lamented on the sheer volume of
requests the company's received in the past year for precise GPS data
for Sprint customers. How did the company meet such high demand?
Apparently, his team built a special "web interface" which "has just
really caught on fire with law enforcement." We're glad that Sprint's
plans to streamline the customer service experience
don't stop short of those who serve and protect, but as the EFF points
out, plenty of nagging questions remain, including: How many individual
customers have been affected? Is Sprint demanding search warrants? How
secure is this web interface? Check out an excerpt from Taylor's speech.
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