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.