• Earlier this year ICE ordered new vehicles equipped with smartphone-tracking hardware.
  • Cell-tower simulating “Stingray” devices gather records on phones in their vicinity.
  • Luckily, Android 16 includes new measure for detecting when you may be monitored in this fashion.
  • absquatulate@lemmy.world
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    6 days ago

    Users who have already updated their phones to Android 16 can even tap into some system-level protection with the new “Network notifications” option

    Wanna bet that feature will soon be cut by google? For your safety of course.

  • Hirom@beehaw.org
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    6 days ago

    Police and government agencies can track phones even when they’re connected to a genuine cell towers, via mobile operators. It’s just slightly more convenient for them to use an ISMI catcher because they collect data without going through a third party.

    Assume a mobile phone can be tracked if it’s powered, regardless of iOS or Android version and settings.

  • katy ✨@piefed.blahaj.zone
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    6 days ago

    too bad android 16 also has the garbage “registered developers” and blocking apk installs insuring i’ll never upgrade.

    • Eager Eagle@lemmy.world
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      6 days ago

      I’m using f-droid on 16 without issues (so far)

      That’s coming next year AFAIK, and I don’t think staying on 15 will prevent it

    • Auli@lemmy.ca
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      6 days ago

      Good but it isn’t the version of Android it is in Google Play Services. So however far back Google is pushing the current version for.

  • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    6 days ago

    Is there really any chance they don’t have direct access to data from the cell towers and actually need to do tracking by other means? I figured this was just a parallel construction type of thing.

    • HellieSkellie@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      6 days ago

      Time to tell on myself a bit, I was a 35N in the US army with experience adjacent to this subject. Stingrays are commercially available devices that pretty much anybody with big money can get their hands on and use. Private companies make various stingray-type devices and those private companies have salesmen who actively want to sell YOU on buying their equipment.

      For law enforcement, getting a continuing agreement with telecommunication companies to have legal access to bulk USP data is a big nightmare with lots of red tape. Even if a police department were to get these agreements with the telecommunications company you’re now introducing all of the inconvenience of dealing with AT&T customer support to get your data from them. This isn’t a joke, pretty often you will still have to work with/through the telecommunications company you have an agreement with to get your data. And to be honest their techs and reps are dumb as bricks, they are so often a common pain point.

      Setting up a stingray on the other hand gives the police department direct access to all the data themselves with no middle-men, and often they even have supplemental support from whichever company they bought their stingrays from. It’s easier, faster, and more convenient data collection 99% of the time to not go through the genuine cell towers.

      • chicken@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        6 days ago

        But we’re talking about a federal agency here, not local law enforcement. It’s been confirmed that systems they tried to keep secret exist for them to have direct access to traffic going through ISPs, so why wouldn’t they have set up something similar for wireless networks, that would eliminate the need to go through any corporate bureaucracy? To me it seems reasonable to assume that such programs exist without being divulged because it would be basically similar to what else has been confirmed to exist, and there’s a really obvious incentive.