I read this article in the New York Times
Briefly, a German Green Party politican requested from his mobile
phone company any records that they have relating to his mobile
phone's geolocation. They were very reluctant to divulge that info
and he took his case to Germany's Supreme Court and finally forced his
phone compnay to hand over the data.
The data is a record of the time and date of any SMS/GPRS activity to
or from his phone together with the location of the base station
through which each of the transactions was routed. Also included in
each record is the direction (I think) of the phone from the base
station.
My thoughts. It must be possible, at least in principle, to record
information relating to the frequent (every few seconds) "pings" each
mobile phone sends out in order to locate its most viable base
station. Geolocation data could be collected without even the mobile
phone accessing any GPRS or SMS service.
If you follow the links on the NY Times page you can end up on the
German Politician's site and download the data.
(It's here if you cannot find it).
There's an interesting graphical representation of the data here
Of course, collecting this information is not, in itself, wrong. What
is wrong is that so few people are aware that it is being
collected. If we don't know that it is both happening
and has tremendous potential in assisting those
intent on demolishing our privacy, then we are unlikely to demand that
safeguards are put on the information's access and use.
There must already be masses of geolocation info collected about us
coming from credit cards, car license plate recognition, etc...
altogether it could provide a very powerful picture to those marketing
products and services.
My information (I hope) is not for sale...!