Privacy activist reveals immense government surveillance program utilizing Sprint/Nextel cellphones: Feds ‘pinged’ Sprint GPS data 8 million times over a year.
Sprint Nextel provided law enforcement agencies with customer location data more than 8 million times between September 2008 and October 2009, according to a company manager who disclosed the statistic at a non-public interception and wiretapping conference in October.
The manager also revealed the existence of a previously undisclosed web portal that Sprint provides law enforcement to conduct automated “pings” to track users. Through the website, authorized agents can type in a mobile phone number and obtain global positioning system (GPS) coordinates of the phone.
The revelations, uncovered by blogger and privacy activist Christopher Soghoian, have spawned questions about the number of Sprint customers who have been under surveillance, as well as the legal process agents followed to obtain such data.
The new access to GPS cellphone tracking only began last year and already, 8 million instances of tracking. Amazing.

Kasim 9:01 am on December 3, 2009 Permalink |
Does anyone know if this is using the active GPS on some phones, or the E911 function required by law on all phones?