Your iPhone or iPad can track and store your every movement. We show you how.

Your iPhone or iPad can track and store your every movement. We show you how.

How easily could someone browse the location data stored by iPhones and iPads? It turns out it's not all that difficult.

iPhones and iPads have been secretly tracking their owners every move, say security researchers, saving the resulting data to a file that’s transferred to their computer whenever the devices are synchronised.

The file contains latitude and longitude positions, and a timestamp. And it’s stored in an easily-read format, so any programs on your system, or users with access to your computer, could easily browse its contents.

How easily? It’s just a matter of downloading a small OS X application, developed by the researchers who discovered the problem, Pete Warden and Alasdair Allan.  Launch the program on a system that you’ve been syncing with an iPhone (or an iPad with a cellular plan), it’ll locate the file in your /Users//Library/Application Support/MobileSync/Backups/ folder, and display the positions on a map.

Some iPhone users have shrugged their shoulders over the reports, and said they’re unconcerned.  Others are more worried, though, and for them, the bad news is that there’s no way to prevent this from occurring.

Disabling GPS won’t help, for instance, as Warden and Allan say that “as far as we can tell, the location is determined by triangulating against the nearest cell-phone towers”.

And while you can delete the local file, or encrypt your backups, there will still be a copy on your device.

It’s still not entirely clear exactly who is affected, though, and how much location-related data might have been recorded, so if you’re interested in the issue then it’s probably worth checking your computer to find out what it knows about your movements. Warden and Allan’s iPhone Tracker 1.0 makes this straightforward, and you can read more about this tracking in their program FAQ.

This article originally appeared at softwarecrew.co.uk

Source: Copyright Software Crew

See more about:  apple  |  ipad  |  iphone  |  petewarden  |  tracker  |  tracking
 
 

Readers of this article also read...

Exclusive First Look: Gigabyte's Z87X-UD3H 

Exclusive First Look: Gigabyte's Z87X-UD3H

 
Samsung Galaxy S4 hits Australia this Saturday 

Samsung Galaxy S4 hits Australia this Saturday

 
Preparing for the future - How the evolution of the PC highlights the importance of the NBN 

Preparing for the future - How the evolution of the PC highlights the importance of the NBN

 
Unboxed: LG's Optimus G "Superphone" 

Unboxed: LG's Optimus G "Superphone"

 
Group Test: Smartphones 

Group Test: Smartphones

 
Comments: 21
TheMan
22 April 2011
Not exactly news. It was discovered a year ago. All you've done is regurgitate some findings that people have published in an attempt to get attention for themselves and create some scaremongering. https://alexlevinson.wordpress.com/2011/04/21/3-major-issues-with-the-latest-iphone-tracking-discovery/



Comment made about the PC & Tech Authority article:
Your iPhone or iPad can track and store your every movement. We show you how.?
How easily could someone browse the location data stored by iPhones and iPads? It turns out it's not all that difficult.

What do you think? Join the discussion.
amcmo
22 April 2011
And you didn't bother checking the latest on this. It does not triangulate from the latest reports but merely saves the location of nearby towers which can be several km away. A recent test in the us showed that the points saved were all Various distances from actual and appeared to be tower locations.

You could use the information to tell what general location a person is in, such as within 2-3 suburbs in some areas, hardly tracking their location. Why is it this mag consistently goes for the headline without getting all the information.

That said, I don't particularly like the idea of such info being available unencrypted
Slatts
23 April 2011
Starting to look like you've got a bit of an issue with this er.. issue amcmo.

That's 2 threads you've jumped in to try to poo poo this little problem.

kevin_watters
23 April 2011
So ? Not an issue unless 1) your doing something you should not be doing and 2) you connect it to a system that can collect and use the data to some purpose.
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
23 April 2011
kevin_watters wrote:
So ? Not an issue unless 1) your doing something you should not be doing and 2) you connect it to a system that can collect and use the data to some purpose.


1) What is that supposed to mean?
2) How does one determine whether a system has been compromised? We had our uni Wi-Fi network compromised at one stage and it pulled sensitive data from connected iPhones.
kevin_watters
23 April 2011
It means exactly what was said: Not an issue unless you don't want (cant have) your APPROXIMATE location to be known (pointless anyway since ALL mobiles are trackable via triangulation as suggested in the article, and have been since mobile phone technology was born), and the data is only accessible from the one mac computer to which the phone is synch'd (unless you synch the physical phone to a new computer)... and unless you don't use itunes at all, means only one possible computer since they dont synch to more than one itunes library/machine at a time without wiping the phones library anyway. Its NOT GPS data thats kept, so you cannot tell which shop, for example, you went into on a particular street.
kevin_watters
23 April 2011
LOL I just used the software to look at my phones records, the data is SO vague that its useless for location tracking (suburb at best). It does at least place you in a certain area (suburb level) at a certain time (based on the frequency of your last synch), but even the time stamps are EXTREMELY vague using this software (again appears to be based on frequency of synchs). It would be interesting to know how accurate the actual time stamp data is.
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
23 April 2011
Ok, but give me an example of "something you should not be doing" on your phone? That's what I'm confused about.
kevin_watters
23 April 2011
No, I mean if you are a criminal and don't want to be followed lol. Like committing crimes or such.
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
23 April 2011
kevin_watters wrote:
No, I mean if you are a criminal and don't want to be followed lol. Like committing crimes or such.

Privacy concerns more than just criminals.
kevin_watters
24 April 2011
Agreed... but Ive seen the program used to view the data and its frankly, a joke to say it can pinpoint you to a certain place at a certain time. And its not an issue unless someone steals your mac and/or your iphone (point moot when your contacts, call logs etc are taken - from any brand phone). So I really would not consider this an issue. As stated, ALL mobiles can be tracked via triangulation. Its just not all phones keep an easy to access log of the towers you have been near on a certain day. Much more privacy is made a concern by facebook or photos a person may post of themself. No one complains that cameras timestamp the photos you take. No one complains that some newer cameras have GPS in them that also pinpoint your EXACT location where the photo was taken along with the timestamp in a method thousands of times more accurate than the iphone and that ALL that data is made public with every photo they post.
Slatts
24 April 2011
For more information, go here and spend 20 minutes watching the video.

Also of interest is this info re information gathering by the Michigan police force.

Obviously a lot of people see this as a storm in a teacup.

Apple true believers will see it as an unwarranted attack on Steve and His Creation.
Definitely unwarranted and inappropriate on this, the anniversary of his death and Resurrection.
(Or was that some lesser deity?)

My personal opinion is that it was, like the similar issue with Google, just a piece of lazy programming by apple and, as we write, someones bum is being kicked for it.

Anyway, it doesn't worry me as my phone is dumb.

.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
24 April 2011
/temps Slatts to Android

You know you want to, free Angry Birds!
photohounds
27 April 2011
WHY store this info on the phone in the first place?
I agree that not just crims don't want to be 'followed' - I can see no real-world example of how storing this data helps the OWNER, so fan boys: Please explain WHY it is there if the OWNER can't use it.
amcmo
27 April 2011
Seems it is the same with Android phones. When you sign up for either type, it's in the contract.

Guess both companies are wanting to control our lives and know everything about what we do.

Being a strong believer in personal privacy, I object to both of them collecting this info.

Guess it's a good reason to stick with my trusty N95. Might not have all the fancy, but it synchs with Outlook, works great as a phone and is passable for music, plus it's been dropped, kicked and to the best of my knowledge, does not broadcast any info.
Mintox
27 April 2011
Wow if people are so paranoid about being tracked I suggest you all stop using your credit cards as that probably gives the government agencies who are almost certainly the ones tracking everyone more information than poor Steves phone does. Time to don the metal cap on with the propeller on top.
Slatts
27 April 2011
Mintox wrote:
Wow if people are so paranoid about being tracked I suggest you all stop using your credit cards as that probably gives the government agencies who are almost certainly the ones tracking everyone more information than poor Steves phone does. Time to don the metal cap on with the propeller on top.


People know that if they use their plastic, there is a record of time, place and amount.

They don't (or didn't) expect their phone to be spying on them.

photohounds
17 May 2011
Well ... the Android phones have an app that can see and DELETE the data. Not perfect, sure, but a *lot* better than the "We're spying whether you like it or not" Apple attitude, first forcing on us, then denying and lying about its existence and purpose.
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
17 May 2011
photohounds wrote:
Well ... the Android phones have an app that can see and DELETE the data. Not perfect, sure, but a *lot* better than the "We're spying whether you like it or not" Apple attitude, first forcing on us, then denying and lying about its existence and purpose.


I doubt they were doing it to spy on people. It was more than likely for the same reason Google were recording Wi-Fi SSIDs on the Street View cars - to update SSID based location services.

Either way, it's been removed.
photohounds
18 May 2011
Removed from all phones shipped after dd-mm-yyyy or remotely uninstalled in real time? Does anyone know?
.:Cyb3rGlitch:.
18 May 2011
Removed with a software update. I imagine new units ship with the latest firmware.
Comments have been disabled for this article.

Latest Comments

Latest Poll

Which broadband network do you think is the best choice for Australia?



or View results
The Coalition's.
  19%
 
Labor's.
  63%
 
Screw this I'm going back to smoke signals and string on a can.
  18%
TOTAL VOTES: 1714

Vote now
Ads by Google

From our Partners

PC & Tech Authority Downloads