Geolocation Data: Available for a Price
December 30, 2024
According to a report from 404 Media, a firm called Fog Data Science is helping law enforcement compile lists of places visited by suspects. Ars Technica reveals, “Location Data Firm Helps Police Find Out When Suspects Visited their Doctor.” Writer Jon Brodkin writes:
“Fog Data Science, which says it ‘harness[es] the power of data to safeguard national security and provide law enforcement with actionable intelligence,’ has a ‘Project Intake Form’ that asks police for locations where potential suspects and their mobile devices might be found. The form, obtained by 404 Media, instructs police officers to list locations of friends’ and families’ houses, associates’ homes and offices, and the offices of a person’s doctor or lawyer. Fog Data has a trove of location data derived from smartphones’ geolocation signals, which would already include doctors’ offices and many other types of locations even before police ask for information on a specific person. Details provided by police on the intake form seem likely to help Fog Data conduct more effective searches of its database to find out when suspects visited particular places. The form also asks police to identify the person of interest’s name and/or known aliases and their ‘link to criminal activity.’ ‘Known locations a POI [Person of Interest] may visit are valuable, even without dates/times,’ the form says. It asks for street addresses or geographic coordinates.”
See the article for an image of the form. It is apparently used to narrow down data points and establish suspects’ routine movements. It could also be used to, say, prosecute abortions, Brodkin notes.
Back in 2022, the Electronic Frontier Foundation warned of Fog Data’s geolocation data horde. Its report detailed which law enforcement agencies were known to purchase Fog’s intel at the time. But where was Fog getting this data? From Venntel, the EFF found, which is the subject of a Federal Trade Commission action. The agency charges Venntel with “unlawfully tracking and selling sensitive location data from users, including selling data about consumers’ visits to health-related locations and places of worship.” The FTC’s order would prohibit Venntel, and parent company Gravy Analytics, from selling sensitive location data. It would also require they establish a “sensitive data location program.” We are not sure what that would entail. And we might never know: the decision may not be finalized until after the president-elect is sworn in.
Cynthia Murrell, December 30, 2024
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