- From: Karl Dubost <karld@opera.com>
- Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2011 13:20:59 -0500
- To: "<Frank.Wagner@telekom.de>" <Frank.Wagner@telekom.de>
- Cc: <public-privacy@w3.org>
Le 25 nov. 2011 à 09:31, <Frank.Wagner@telekom.de> <Frank.Wagner@telekom.de> a écrit : > We had this in Germany around all the discussions about streetview. They told that the collection of the SSID was a software bug. I wonder that the bug has not been fixed in other countries.... Not exactly. There are two things. 1. The association of SSID + MAC address to geolocation 2. The collection of data going through these networks. The second one is a no-no for obvious reasons. The first one (which I relate to in my first email) is an interesting issue of the internet of things. - Devices have ids to communicate - Some devices are localizable - either because they are in a fixed position (WIFI) - either because they move in a geolocalized network of cells (Mobile phone) - Devices are used by humans (carried) The geolocation gives a lot of services when it goes from human to devices. The geolocation becomes a very hard privacy issue when it goes from device to humans. There are "privacy built-in" geolocation systems such as - a paper map - streets sign (name of streets, or block reference in Japan) - GPS And system which are very bad such as - Triangulation of cell towers (because of your user id on that network) (not the system could be opaque if phone companies where accepting to provide a signal where the device would compute its location without having a user id. I think it would be a wonderful feature. I fear it would not happen.) -- Karl Dubost - http://dev.opera.com/ Developer Relations & Tools, Opera Software
Received on Friday, 25 November 2011 18:21:42 UTC