tim anderson
R E L A T E D   C O N T E N T
ADVERTISEMENT

Tim Anderson

Do you want to broadcast your location?

Location-based services have great potential but will fail if privacy implications are not thought through

IT Week, 01 Nov 2007
ADVERTISEMENT

In early October, Yahoo’s Tom Coates presented Fire Eagle, a geographic service now in alpha testing that will provide data to location-based internet applications.

As Coates explained, there are two sides to any “geo” service. The first is to know where you are, and the second is to do something useful with that information. Fire Eagle aims to solve the inherent difficulties of knowing a person’s location by using multiple techniques, including manual input. In an increasingly wireless world, the problem is solving itself.

“An application on my mobile phone could be uploading my cell ID to Fire Eagle every 10 minutes,” said Coates. “We already have applications that do this. The same application can attach itself to a GPS unit.”

The next question is how this data can be used. Fire Eagle will publish an open API to make it available to any application for which you give consent. “If you know where someone is, there is an almost grotesque amount of contextual information you can provide that person: friends; local traffic; TV stations; weather forecasts; air quality; exchange rates; local laws, such as speed limits; and nearby points of interest,” said Coates. You could create a location-sensitive home page, showing nearby restaurants, shops, taxis, or financial services.

Another service that is attracting attention is Dopplr, a social network for frequent travellers that makes it easier to link with contacts who happen to be nearby.

There are obvious possibilities for advertisers. It is easy to imagine social networking sites, such as Facebook or LinkedIn, building their own equivalents to Fire Eagle, or perhaps using the service. If you bring together location with Facebook’s concept of the “social graph”, you have a more powerful platform for applications that build on our business and personal relationships. The win for the service providers is the opportunity for contextual advertising. It is also a way to hook us more deeply to our identities on their platforms.

It sounds great, but what about privacy? How do you take advantage of what is now possible without becoming more vulnerable to identity theft or other crimes? There is a simple principle to observe, articulated by Microsoft’s Kim Cameron as the second of his “laws of identity,” and it is called minimal disclosure. “The solution which discloses the least amount of identifying information and best limits its use is the most stable long-term solution” he writes. Fire Eagle is exciting but thoroughly spooky, and I will be more impressed if Yahoo can convincingly show how the principle of minimal disclosure will be observed.


Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story
RELATED ARTICLES
M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links
F E A T U R E D   J O B S
Hove, United Kingdom | Brighton & Hove City Council
 Assistant Director / Head of ICT, c£75k plus relocation, Hove  Technology has a huge part to play in people's lives. It empowers them, supports them, sets them free and makes their lives easier in a million ... more >
London, United Kingdom | COI
Intranet Support & Development Officer, London, £29,507 - £36,004 + Excellent Benefits  We're looking for an experienced and proactive professional to support our current intranet and support the procurement of a new corporate CMS. As ... more >
Buckinghamshire, United Kingdom | Grass Roots
C# ASP.Net Developer, Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, Excellent Salary + Benefits Grass Roots are one of the Sunday Times Top 100 companies to work for (2007 and 2008). Established in 1980, we're part of the Grass Roots ... more >
West Midlands, Warwickshire, United Kingdom | Latham
System Tester/Test Analyst £27K-£32K + bonus, flexitime, 35 hour week, South Warwickshire, West Midlands. System Tester, Test Analyst, Systems Tester. Large financial services company looking for proven Testers and Test Analysts. Do you have at least ... more >
More job opportunities