• Send Us A Tip
  • Calling all Tech Writers
  • Advertise
Friday, July 10, 2026
  • Login
TechStory
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
TechStory
No Result
View All Result
Home News

Homeland Security is tracking US citizens by using data on phone location

by Disha Mitra
July 21, 2022
in News, Tech
Reading Time: 2 mins read
0
Image depicting someone using a phone

Source: ACLU

TwitterWhatsappLinkedin
Phone screen showing location data
Homeland Security is tracking US citizens by using data on phone location.
Source: The Washington Post

The Department of Homeland Security is reportedly purchasing accesses to location information of the numerous smartphones of various citizens of the US. This was disclosed by documents unreleased before, and now brought out by the ACLU- American Civil Liberties Union. As earlier reports specified, several segments of DHS bought the data without consent. The Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customers Enforcement were part of this.

You might also like

The Zero-Dollar Unicorn Why Free Apps Can Become Billion Dollar Businesses

The Open Blueprint Why Open Source Matters More Than Ever

Fiat Topolino Heads to America as a Tiny EV Built for Slow Living

Responding to this, ACLU went on to file a request with the Freedom of Information to CBP, ICE and DHS, going on to file a lawsuit afterwards. As the litigation goes on, a decision came from the union to make all the collected records public. These include the ones from the three bodies, along with US Coast Guard and offices existing in the headquarters of the DHS.

DHS, as shown by the records, made use of a large amount of taxpayer dollars for purchase of the data, mainly from brokers Babel Street, along with Venntel. Turns out, law enforcement can make use of the information for the identification of phones focussed on locations often visited, frequent visitors, discovery of life patterns, along with places of interests.

An internal document from 2018 included the proposition of the use data from Venntel for identifying illegal immigration patterns. Additionally, another request was from local police to DHS asking for analytics of such connected to overdoses of opioid in their jurisdiction.

How is the data used presented?

Mainly, the paperwork characterising location information simply as “digital exhaust,” that is stuck to a numerical identifier. However, it does not include personally identify  information. Essentially, this conceals the point that digits are linked to identity data. Alongside, it is established by data brokers that users of these devices often reveal their location voluntarily while consenting to permission for GPS data.

However, users are seldom sure of exactly how many applications collect such data, and they don’t expect such information to be sold. In fact, even employees at DHS expressed concerns over the buying of such data owing to the goal being so explicit. Evidently, such usage of the concerned information comes across as an evident breach of the Fourth Amendment.

Resultantly, the ACLU is pushing the Congress to pass a bipartisan proposal from 2021- the Fourth Amendment Is Not For Sale Act. The government would be required by the bill to gain warrant prior to the collection of data from data brokers.

 

Tags: citizenshomeland securitylocation datasmartphoneTech newsUSA
Tweet54SendShare15
Previous Post

Discounts on Smartphones for Amazon Prime Day Sale 2022

Next Post

Amazon brings changes to Prime Video UI with a dedicated Sports Tab

Disha Mitra

Recommended For You

The Zero-Dollar Unicorn Why Free Apps Can Become Billion Dollar Businesses

by Anochie Esther
July 10, 2026
0
why free apps can become billion dollar businesses

The modern software landscape operates on a fascinating psychological paradox: the most lucrative products on earth cost absolutely nothing to download. For decades, traditional commerce relied on a...

Read more

The Open Blueprint Why Open Source Matters More Than Ever

by Anochie Esther
July 10, 2026
0
why open source matters more than ever

The foundational architecture of global technology is undergoing a quiet but profound transformation. For decades, the dominant economic playbook for software development was simple: construct a proprietary digital...

Read more

Fiat Topolino Heads to America as a Tiny EV Built for Slow Living

by Samir Gautam
July 10, 2026
0
Fiat Topolino Heads to America as a Tiny EV Built for Slow Living

The idea of driving a tiny electric vehicle through quiet neighborhoods or along a beachside promenade may soon become a reality in the United States. Fiat has confirmed...

Read more
Next Post
Amazon brings changes to Prime Video UI with a dedicated Sports Tab

Amazon brings changes to Prime Video UI with a dedicated Sports Tab

Please login to join discussion

Techstory

Tech and Business News from around the world. Follow along for latest in the world of Tech, AI, Crypto, EVs, Business Personalities and more.
reach us at info@techstory.in

Advertise With Us

Reach out at - info@techstory.in

Aviator Game India 2026

BROWSE BY TAG

#Crypto #howto 2024 acquisition AI amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence bitcoin Business China cryptocurrency e-commerce electric vehicles Elon Musk Ethereum facebook funding Gaming Google India Instagram Investment ios iPhone IPO Market Markets Meta Microsoft News OpenAI samsung Social Media SpaceX startup startups tech technology Tesla TikTok trend trending twitter US

© 2025 Techstory.in

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to

© 2025 Techstory.in

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?