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Northeastern Cell Phone Study Draws Anger; University Defends Researcher

6/9/2008

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Looking for a little privacy in your life? If so, you might want to leave that cell phone behind. Research released last week by Northeastern University showed not only how easy it is to track individuals by their cell phone usage, but how easy it is to track massive groups of people as well--all without their consent. The research has drawn the ire of those both inside and outside academia for the act of breaching these individuals' privacy and for the implications for further enabling the surveillance culture. But Northeastern is defending the research, saying that the privacy of those studied was of the utmost concern.

The results of the research itself were fairly unstartling, concluding simply that people in large part do not travel very far from homes in their daily lives and that they settle into regular patterns in their travels. The methodology and secrecy of the study, however, raised several concerns. Researchers, with funding from the United States Office of Naval Research, tracked some 100,000 people without their knowledge but with the consent of an unnamed carrier, using their cell phone billing records for six months. In the United States, such tracking is not (quite yet) legal. Northeastern researchers have not disclosed the name of the country in which the tracking took place, saying only that it was a country in Europe. The researchers also tracked the movements of another 206 individuals with GPS-enabled phones over a one-week period.

And it's this clandestine aspect to the study that has some up in arms.

Writing for CNET, Don Reisinger stated, "Instead of performing a study that has some serious social consequences that may make understanding human nature just a bit easier, the researchers at Northeastern University chose instead to follow a path that sets a dangerous precedent for privacy issues and looks dangerously similar to many more privacy problems we've witnessed over the past few years."

Reisinger isn't alone. Since details of the study were released last week, dozens of articles have appeared (out of hundreds covering the research itself) questioning the methods of the researchers.



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