If you use a mobile phone with location services turned on, it is likely that data about where you live and work, where you shop for groceries, where you go to church and see your doctor, and where you traveled to over the holidays is up for sale. And U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement is one of the customers. The U.S. government doesn't need to collect data about people's locations itself, because your mobile phone is already doing it. While location data is sometimes collected as part of a mobile phone app's intended use, like for navigation or to get a weather forecast, more often locations are collected invisibly in the background. I am a privacy researcher who studies how people understand and make decisions about data that is collected about them, and I research new ways to help consumers get back some control over their privacy. Unfortunately, once you give an app or webpage permission to collect location data, you no longer have control over how the data is used and...
learn more