Jobs & Apple Executives Speak on Location Tracking Issues

Recently, Apple product releases such as iPad 2 and the white iPhone 4 have been overshadowed in the news with negative leaning press surrounding the iOS device location tracking issue identified last week. For those unfamiliar with the controversy, essentially a small file containing nearly a year’s worth of location data was discovered within the backup files of iOS devices such as the iPhone and 3G equipped iPad. This data, when plotted, yields incredibly accurate results showing the device’s travels. This means if you keep your iPhone on your person, your movements have effectively been tracked for up to a year. Purportedly an invasion of personal information, privacy concerns were immediately raised. Misunderstanding and speculation of Apple’s involvement and usage of collected data initially gave way to moderate panic in some users. In the days following the discovery, Apple was largely silent on the issue. Save for a characteristically blunt email exchange between Steve Jobs and a concerned user, the company refrained from issuing an official statement on the findings.

Wednesday, however, Steve Jobs, Phil Schiller and Scott Forstall agreed to a telephone interview conducted by All Things Digital. During the interview, Jobs explained the company’s initial silence, claiming it was due to Apple throughly researching the issue to best deliver the facts to its customers. Jobs explained:

We’re an engineering-driven company, When people accuse us of things, the first thing we want to do is find out the truth. That took a certain amount of time to track all of these things down. And the accusations were coming day by day. By the time we had figured this all out, it took a few days. Then writing it up and trying to make it intelligible when this is a very high-tech topic took a few days. And here we are less than a week later.

The interview continued with further contributions from Jobs, Schiller and Forstall on how Apple deals with privacy—specifically location based apps, whether or not Apple plans to testify before Congress on the issue, what Apple uses the acquired information for, and how the company’s privacy and security policies differ from its competitors. An edited transcript of the interview can be found here.

Sensing the growing controversy surrounding the issue, Apple published an official Q&A style document to its PR library detailing the facts of the situation. Although Apple claims the information is merely for maintaining a database of Wi-Fi hotspots and cell towers around a user’s current location, and that any collected data is anonymous ad encrypted, it will be formally addressing the issue with a future software update.

Scheduled for release in the next few weeks, Apple plans to issue a free iOS update which will perform the following:

  • Reduce the size of the crowd-sourced Wi-Fi hotspot and cell tower database cached on the iPhone.
  • Cease backing up this cache when synced with a computer.
  • Delete the cache entirely when Location Services is turned off.

While this news doesn’t exactly have people fitting their tin foil hats and smashing their iPhones, it is always a bit disconcerting to know big brother Steve is watching. As with the iPhone 4 antenna controversy last summer, we feel that by taking its time and formulating an accurate and concise response, Apple has handled this issue to the best of its ability. What are your thoughts on the issue? Is privacy something that should be traded in exchange for the technology we enjoy—and in many cases rely on? Feel free to share your thoughts below.

Similar Posts

  • WWDC 2007 – Live from San Francisco!

    Apple’s annual World Wide Developers Conference kicks off today with a keynote address from Steve Jobs beginning at 10:00a.m. PST. We expect that…

  • A mini for All Seasons…

    I am a very busy full-time consultant for Small Dog. Sometimes I help clients at our Vermont retail stores, but most of the…

  • Apple Releases Safari 5

    With Apple’s announcement of the revolutionary iPhone 4 yesterday, it would be easy to overlook the release of Safari 5 that coincided with it. While certainly not as glamorous as Apple’s latest device, the newest version of Safari does bring some changes that will give it a serious leg up in the browser wars.

    Performance is easily the biggest deciding factor when choosing a browser, and Apple has upgraded Safari with a faster “Nitro” engine to keep themselves ahead of the game. Apple claims Safari 5 will run JavaScript 30 percent faster than Safari 4, 3 percent faster than Chrome 5.0 and more than twice as fast as Firefox 3.6.

    In addition to significant speed boosts, Safari 5 also includes the Safari Reader. This utility automatically detects if you are browsing a page with an article on it, and allows you to view it in a continuous and clutter-free manner. To enable Safari Reader, simply navigate to an applicable page and click the Reader icon in the Smart Address Field. Upon doing so, onscreen controls, similar to those seen when viewing a PDF, will appear and let you email, print, and zoom. Safari Reader even saves text settings so font size is the same if you revisit the page.

    Though not apparent by simply glancing at the UI, Safari 5 also includes a robust set of HTML5 tweaks under the hood. The new browser brings over a dozen new features including full-screen mode and closed captioning for HTML5 video as well as HTML5 geolocation. To view some examples of the HTML5 web standard in action, check out Apple’s showcase of demos here.

    Other more subtle refinements include DNS prefetching and improved catching. DNS prefetching means that if you are viewing a web page with links, Safari detects them and looks them up behind the scenes. When you click a link, the page loads faster as a result. A web cache is essentially an index of pages previously viewed. Since Safari 5’s cache has been expanded, more pages fit into it and load faster upon being revisited.

    Appending the aforementioned features are other upgrades such as a smarter address field, integrated Bing search, hardware acceleration for Windows and an improved web inspector. Safari 5 is available today, and is a free download for Mac + PC. Download it here.