location services + police
Mar. 8th, 2020 08:42 pmWe know that any device (like a phone) with location services turned on is generating a large pile of data about your every movement. If you don't want Google or Apple to know that, you turn location services off.
And if you're about to commit a crime and you're planning to get away with it, you leave your phone at home, or you turn location services off well in advance and keep them off so you don't create an obvious window.
These things I knew. What I hadn't previously heard of is geofencing warrants, where police can subpoena location data for everything in range of a crime scene, dig through it, and then get an arrest warrant for the owner of a specific device. Fortunately Google give the target a heads-up; unfortunately I do not know if that is them "just being nice" (so they could decide not to) or if they have to.
H/t
madfilkentist.
(no subject)
Date: 2020-03-09 11:21 am (UTC)On a writers' forum, one person talked about getting some harsh questioning just because he went jogging near a building while the police were investigating a crime there. Getting the attention of the police while they're investigating a crime is a bad thing in general.
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Date: 2020-03-09 11:34 am (UTC)(no subject)
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Date: 2020-03-10 01:05 pm (UTC)I think a warrant means they have to, whether that kind of broad warrant is constitutional will have to be verified in the upper courts though, until then, they'll continue to use them.
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