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S. Korea probes Apple about tracking feature

by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) April 25, 2011
South Korea's telecoms regulator said Monday it had launched an inquiry into Apple to see whether the US giant's collection of location data from its iPhone and iPad users violates privacy rules.

The probe follows claims that Apple traced and stored geographical data from its mobile device users in countries such as France and Germany.

The Korea Communications Commission said it had sent a list of questions asking Apple Korea to clarify why location data was collected from mobile device users and how frequently such data was recorded.

Apple is also required to explain why such information is not encrypted, whether device users have a choice over data deletion or data storage, and whether such data is stored on its servers, it said.

British security researchers have said the position-logging feature is contained in iOS 4, the operating system for the iPhone and iPad released in June.

They said iOS 4-equipped iPhones and iPads store latitude and longitude coordinates along with a time stamp, probably through cell-tower triangulation.

They noted that cellphone companies typically have access to this data but it is not usually stored on a mobile device itself.

The Wall Street Journal reported that Google's Android smartphones also regularly transmit their locations back to Google.

KT, the second-biggest mobile carrier in South Korea, has sold more than two million iPhones since November 2009.



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GPS use said to dull 'direction finding'
Dundee, Scotland (UPI) Apr 21, 2011
Growing reliance on satellite navigation and Global Positioning System devices is creating a generation with little sense of direction, a U.K. scientist says. Rosamund Langston, a behavioral neuroscientist at the University of Dundee, says drivers who use in-car computers to find their way around unfamiliar locations are neglecting a "caveman" ability to familiarize themselves with new ... read more







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