Aside from ensuring you don't accidentally photograph someone and make legal trouble for them, these warrants are why you don't bring your phones to a protest.
Yet buying, harvesting, and selling geofence data is perfectly fine.
I understand that companies have to submit to these rulings, but do they have to do it quietly? It's mostly a rhetorical question. They could keep a tally of every instance the government made they do something they disapproved of and make it public. Not profitable at all unfortunately.
I'm under the impression that these sort of third-party warrants are often accompanied by a gag order. Which is why warrant canaries are a thing.
What about not collecting the data in the first place?
Not really an option, when the data is being used for billing purposes (which phone, used what services, and when).
The US has no laws forcing data retention like the EU, but it would take something like anonymous micro transactions in order to have a working billing system, without collecting the data (and it being available to law enforcement).
That data comes from Google. They aren't billing android users. They're just hoarding data for no good reason.
Police isn't going after Apple for this kind of data, probably because Apple isn't collecting it.
Even mobile telecom company probably don't need to collect that data. They need to process the location/cell location when a call happens to process it, and to increase a counter for local vs roaming call duration for billing purpose. As soon as the call ends the location information can be discarded.
There ya go. 👍
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