Microsoft curbs Wi-Fi location database | Privacy Inc. – CNET News

Microsoft has ceased publishing the estimated locations of millions of laptops, cell phones, and other devices with Wi-Fi connections around the world after a CNET article on Friday highlighted privacy concerns.

The decision to rework Live.com’s geolocation service comes following scrutiny of the way Microsoft made available its database assembled by both Windows Phone 7 phones and what the company calls “managed driving” by Street View-like vehicles that record Wi-Fi signals accessible from public roads. Every Wi-Fi device has a unique ID, sometimes called a MAC address, that cannot normally be changed.

Live.com’s database, which published the precise geographical locations of Wi-Fi devices, was working normally last Friday. By Saturday morning, Elie Bursztein, a postdoctoral researcher at the Stanford Security Laboratory who had analyzed the Live.com service, noticed that access had been restricted.

Stanford researcher Elie Bursztein had suggested that Microsoft should curb access to its database.

That follows a similar move by Google, which curbed access to its location database days after a June 15 CNET article appeared. Skyhook Wireless, which provides similar location services, already used a limited form of geolocation to protect privacy.

via Microsoft curbs Wi-Fi location database | Privacy Inc. – CNET News.

Google’s Web mapping can track your phone | Privacy Inc. – CNET News

-If you have Wi-Fi turned on, the previous whereabouts of your computer or mobile device may be visible on the Web for anyone to see.

Google publishes the estimated location of millions of iPhones, laptops, and other devices with Wi-Fi connections, a practice that represents the latest twist in a series of revelations this year about wireless devices and privacy, CNET has learned.

Android phones with location services enabled regularly beam the unique hardware IDs of nearby Wi-Fi devices back to Google, a similar practice followed by Microsoft, Apple, and Skyhook Wireless as part of each company’s effort to map the street addresses of access points and routers around the globe. That benefits users by helping their mobile devices determine locations faster than they could with GPS alone.

 

A wireless MAC address from a coffeeshop in San Francisco’s Mission district was also spotted here. (Click for full-sized image.)

Only Google and Skyhook Wireless, however, make their location databases linking hardware IDs to street addresses publicly available on the Internet, which raises novel privacy concerns when the IDs they’re tracking are mobile. If someone knows your hardware ID, he may be able to find a physical address that the companies associate with you–even if you never intended it to become public.

Tests performed over the last week by CNET and security researcher Ashkan Soltani showed that approximately 10 percent of laptops and mobile phones using Wi-Fi appear to be listed by Google as corresponding to street addresses. Skyhook Wireless’ list of matches appears to be closer to 5 percent.

via Exclusive: Google’s Web mapping can track your phone | Privacy Inc. – CNET News.

Google’s Web mapping can track your phone | Privacy Inc. – CNET News

-If you have Wi-Fi turned on, the previous whereabouts of your computer or mobile device may be visible on the Web for anyone to see.

Google publishes the estimated location of millions of iPhones, laptops, and other devices with Wi-Fi connections, a practice that represents the latest twist in a series of revelations this year about wireless devices and privacy, CNET has learned.

Android phones with location services enabled regularly beam the unique hardware IDs of nearby Wi-Fi devices back to Google, a similar practice followed by Microsoft, Apple, and Skyhook Wireless as part of each company’s effort to map the street addresses of access points and routers around the globe. That benefits users by helping their mobile devices determine locations faster than they could with GPS alone.

 

A wireless MAC address from a coffeeshop in San Francisco’s Mission district was also spotted here. (Click for full-sized image.)

Only Google and Skyhook Wireless, however, make their location databases linking hardware IDs to street addresses publicly available on the Internet, which raises novel privacy concerns when the IDs they’re tracking are mobile. If someone knows your hardware ID, he may be able to find a physical address that the companies associate with you–even if you never intended it to become public.

Tests performed over the last week by CNET and security researcher Ashkan Soltani showed that approximately 10 percent of laptops and mobile phones using Wi-Fi appear to be listed by Google as corresponding to street addresses. Skyhook Wireless’ list of matches appears to be closer to 5 percent.

via Exclusive: Google’s Web mapping can track your phone | Privacy Inc. – CNET News.

Skyhook Sues Google in Location Patent, Contract Dispute | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

Skyhook Wireless has sued Google for both patent infringement and for allegedly interfering with business contracts for both Motorola and Samsung.

The two suits were filed Wednesday; both were filed in Massachusetts, but the patent infringement suit was filed in federal court, while the case involving the contract dispute was filed in Suffolk County, where Boston’s Skyhook is headquartered.

Google representatives said that the company had not been served with the suit as yet, and therefore could not comment.

The federal case is relatively straightforward, accusing Google of violating four location patents: No. 7,414,988, entitled “Server for Updating Location Beacon Database”; No. 7,433,694, entitled “Location Beacon Database”; No. 7,474,897, entitled “Continuous Data Optimization by Filtering and Positioning Systems”; and No. 7,305,245, entitled “Location-Based Services That Choose Location Algorithms Based on Number of Detected Access Points Within Range of User Device”.

In that case, Skyhook has asked Google for damages and for the court to enjoin the company from further violations of the patent.

via Skyhook Sues Google in Location Patent, Contract Dispute | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

After Google incident, Wi-Fi data collection goes on – Computerworld

Four months ago, amidst a backlash from government regulators and privacy advocates, Google stopped collecting Wi-Fi data with its Street View cars. But that doesn’t mean Google has stopped collecting wireless data altogether, and neither have other companies such as Apple.

Instead of sending out cars to sniff out wireless networks, Google is now crowdsourcing the operation, with users of its Android phones and location-aware mobile applications doing the reconnaissance work for it. In the past few months, Apple has quietly started building a similar database, leveraging its large base of users to log basic Wi-Fi data.

There are others: A Boston company, Skyhook Wireless, has been logging wireless access points for years, as has its competitor, Navizon of Miami Beach, Florida.

It’s a trend that’s been spurred by the intense interest in applications such as FourSquare and Facebook Places. As it becomes increasingly important for programs that run on your phone to know exactly where you are — to be location-aware in industry parlance — having a way of figuring out exactly where you are becomes critical. But the companies collecting this data haven’t come under much scrutiny, many users do not understand how the data is being collected or why, and security experts are just now starting to discover some of the ways that this information could be misused.

via After Google incident, Wi-Fi data collection goes on – Computerworld.