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Surveillance

Your Cell Phone Is Spying on You

An FBI document reminds us: Your cell phone provider knows where you've been—and will tell the feds.

Brian Doherty | 10.25.2021 4:38 PM

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(Photo 882213 © Rossco | Dreamstime.com)

It's been nearly a decade since Reason informed you that "Your Cellphone is Spying on You." A 2019 document from the FBI's "Cellular Analysis Survey Team" (CAST) project, newly uncovered by the transparency group Property of the People, reminds us of some of the hows and whys.

The 139-slide document instructs investigators on what they can do via cell phone surveillance. It spells out what cops can get via just a subpoena (such as a "call to destination search," "payment information," or IP addresses) and what requires a warrant (such as text content or a trap-and-trace for all the numbers you're calling or fielding calls from). It offers language to use when asking your cell service provider to spy on you. Agents are advised to keep careful eye on such details as the first numbers called in the morning and last numbers called at night. Police are reminded that they not only can find where a number they are interested in has been, but also every number that has been used near a specific cell tower location.

CAST offers mapping programs to help investigators visualize what the cell data they are scarfing up tell them (which they warn "should not be taken to court without being validated for accuracy"). The presentation gives lots of pointers on using Google Earth for tracking and identifying locations. And the surveillance web doesn't rely only on cell phones: "license plate readers" are another element that cops can feed into the system, as is the original federal tracing device, the Social Security number.

The presentation also tells agents what they can get from Facebook, including "basic subscriber info" via subpoena, messages over the past 180 days via "court order," and photos, private messages, and friend lists via search warrant. This applies both to individual Facebook users and to groups. These realities makes recent discussion of encryption on Facebook all the more relevant.

It was good to see investigating agents being reminded that a cell provider may, at its discretion, deny an "exigent request" for instant info that allegedly involves an "emergency involving danger of death or serious physical injury." At the same time, those rejections can be overriden, though an authority at least as high as an deputy assistant attorney general has to approve such a move.

And that's just part of what's in the document. As Vice reports, it

also explains how data requests from Mobile Virtual Network Operators (MVNOs) such as Boost Mobile are handled, explains how to obtain location data from what the FBI describes as "burner phones," and how to obtain information from OnStar, General Motors' in-vehicle system. The document also provides the cost of some of this data for law enforcement to request.

The presentation provides more recent figures on how long telecoms retain data for. AT&T holds onto data such as call records, cell site, and tower dumps for 7 years. T-Mobile holds similar information for 2 years, and Verizon holds it for 1 year.

We live in an age of concern over "domestic terrorism"—and if there's one thing the years since 9/11 have taught us, it's that terror investigations often entail the harrassment and surveillance of Americans who have not actually committed a crime but are being probed for the company they keep. At such a time, it's good to keep in mind what a squealer that little device in your pocket can be.

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NEXT: Whistleblower Absurdly Attacks Facebook's Privacy-Protecting Encryption Efforts

Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason and author of Ron Paul's Revolution: The Man and the Movement He Inspired (Broadside Books).

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  1. Moonrocks   4 years ago

    Private Company, am I right?

    1. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

      ENB 101: It's perfectly fine for the government to pressure companies to do everything they want, as long as the government isn't doing it directly to the citizen.

      1. CE   4 years ago

        And as long as it isn't pressuring the companies to NOT spy on people or NOT check their medical records.

        1. Stuck in California   4 years ago

          Cellphones are a great example of slippery slope.

          The cell phone companies were required by law to collect this data. Originally it was claimed so you could position a caller for 911 emergencies, but it meant you couldn't buy a phone that did NOT provide at least rough data from cell tower triangulation.

          Now that the data revolution is upon us, since the data exists, of course everyone and their uncle will exploit that data. Especially law enforcement.

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          2. docduracoat   4 years ago

            Please remember not to bring your cell phone to the scene of the crime to plan to commit.
            Turn on porn on your computer, and leave your cell phone at home.
            It’s extremely difficult to explain how are your cell phone went to the site where they found the body.

      2. Commenter_XY   4 years ago

        You know, if you substituted 'sex worker' for 'citizen' in your comment, that would be much closer to something ENB might say. 🙂

        1. Chumby   4 years ago

          Cumrade.

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  2. Idaho Bob   4 years ago

    Yep, the convenient, portable telescreens
    I thought everyone knew thy were being spied on?

    1. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

      "The voice came from an oblong metal plaque like a dulled mirror which formed part of the surface of the right-hand wall. . . The instrument (the telescreen, it was called) could be dimmed, but there was no way of shutting it off completely...

      The telescreen received and transmitted simultaneously. Any sound that Winston made, above the level of a very low whisper, would be picked up by it; moreover, so long as he remained within the field of vision which the metal plaque commanded, he could be seen as well as heard. There was of course no way of knowing whether you were being watched at any given moment.

      Telescreen, what's the weather forecast tomorrow?

      1. Sometimes a Great Notion   4 years ago

        WRONG THINK! The weather under Big Brother has and always will be perfect. Report to the Ministry of Love.

      2. Tony   4 years ago

        Orwell got a lot right. I wonder if he foresaw fascists liking Orwell. I suppose it's rather Orwellian in concept.

        1. Vulgar Madman   4 years ago

          Jesus Christ, you are always scaling new heights of retardation.

  3. Chumby   4 years ago

    My cellphone is also responsible for wrapping my car around a tree at 2am. And the for the dead hooker that responding police found in the trunk. Bad cellphone.

    1. Unicorn Abattoir   4 years ago

      I want to party with your cellphone.

      1. Mother's Lament   4 years ago

        His cellphone sounds pretty wild.

    2. Eeyore   4 years ago

      I stole your cellphone and put it in Hunter Biden's trunk. I'm sorry.

      1. Chumby   4 years ago

        Have heard of dropped calls before but dropped call girls?

        1. Eeyore   4 years ago

          It's the digital version of a dead hooker in the trunk.

  4. Sometimes a Great Notion   4 years ago

    End the Third Party Doctrine!

    1. rreally   4 years ago

      End stupid thinking that third parties will protect your privacy by default.

      If you want to pay a communications company to keep your transmissions secret, I'm sure they will. For a fee. Alternatively, encrypt.

      Looking at reality and dreaming how the government could make it work the way you want is the path to the dark side.

  5. Dillinger   4 years ago

    my phone is more voyeur than outright spy

  6. Longtobefree   4 years ago

    Yawn.
    Nothing to see here, move on.

  7. Tony   4 years ago

    Oh yeah. No way you get away with a good old-fashioned murder anymore. You think you took all the precautions, and they will get you on some techy thing you never even considered. And if you throw your phone in a lake in another state, that's just suspicious behavior. Makes you wonder why we need so many cops.

    1. Vulgar Madman   4 years ago

      Just say they were trespassing and shoot them in the back, tony!

      1. HorseConch   4 years ago

        Over 1/3 of murders go unsolved. Maybe all those cities should defund the police and buy cellphones for the risky chunks of the populace.

        1. Granite   4 years ago

          * but those are all black people

  8. NOYB2   4 years ago

    And if you don’t carry one, that will be considered highly suspicious and a sign of potential wrongdoing. After all, you will need your phone almost everywhere to prove your COVID vaccine status, so it is inconceivable that you wouldn’t be carrying it.

  9. TJJ2000   4 years ago

    Joe Biden and Obama, "A Domestic Terrorist is any USA patriotic citizen who gives even an ounce of respect for the U.S. Constitution over our Nazi(National Socialist) Regime."

    A paraphrased quote directly from the FBI.gov website during the Obama Administration.

    No joke; The left has initiated a Nazi-Regime in the USA that is so Anti-USA they consider the U.S. Constitution a terrorists manifesto.

    1. TJJ2000   4 years ago

      ...Because "Fundamentally changing America" ... doesn't include what the USA is but what Regime will take-it-over.

    2. rreally   4 years ago

      Don't put quotes around your harebrained paraphrases...

  10. Duelles   4 years ago

    “ such as text content or a trap-and-trace for all the numbers you're calling or fielding calls from” Then arrest the fucking spamming bastards calling me 30-40 x a day.

  11. Rich   4 years ago

    Your cell phone provider knows where you've your cell phone has been—and will tell the feds.

    "Your Honor, my client frequently, attaches xir cell phone to xir pet dog, which is perfectly legal."

  12. Utkonos   4 years ago

    Anyone remember the 1990s bumper sticker slogan KILL YOUR TELEVISION SET? (Even saw it, in English, on a protest placard in Belgrade during anti-Milosevic demonstrations.) I keep waiting to see KILL YOUR “SMART”PHONE ! Alas….

    1. Utkonos   4 years ago

      Grumpy Old Man Aside of The Day: Based on how at least 65% of people behave with their phones in public (apparently NEVER having heard of earphones being but one of many examples) I also fantasize about an ad campaign with the slogan DON’T LET YOUR PHONE BE THE ONLY “SMART” THING ABOUT YOU!!!

  13. kapilsandeepca   4 years ago

    “Amazing write-up!”

  14. VISHYAT TECHNOLOGIES SEO INDIA   4 years ago

    Nice article....

  15. IceTrey   4 years ago

    That's why I leave my phone at home when I'm out...never mind.

  16. T.C.   4 years ago

    Ive never had a Facebook account, for reasons that are outlined in the article. Not that I'm afraid of the law, but I simply don't want to be tracked and classified.

    Which is why I find it both ironic and frustrating when Reason holds "Member" events on Facebook, while warning us about how much information we are giving up to Facebook.

    If I subscribe to the magazine, and send the foundation a check every year, why should my participation in membership events be contingent on subscribing to a Facebook service that Reason warns against.

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  18. Otis R. Needleman   4 years ago

    I keep my cell phone turned off except when I want to make a call. ZERO trust in the government/law enforcement/media/judiciary at ANY level.

    1. Miles Fortis   4 years ago

      Simply turning it off doesn't work. If the battery is still in, it's powering, at a minimum, the GPS which is logged.

  19. flogician   4 years ago

    Your Cell Phone Is Spying on You

    So is reason.com. What's with the all tracking cookies, boys?

  20. AOS TV APK FILE   4 years ago

    I think it's irrelevent that a phone cannot spy on the user beacause it doesn't have special intelligence.Best regards AOS TV Apk Tq.

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