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Firm pays $950,000 penalty for using Wi-Fi signals to secretly track phone users

Posted on June 22, 2016 by pogowasright.org

Dan Goodin reports:

A mobile advertising company that tracked the locations of hundreds of millions of consumers without consent has agreed to pay $950,000 in civil penalties and implement a privacy program to settle charges that it violated federal law.

The US Federal Trade Commission alleged in a complaint filed Wednesday that Singapore-based InMobi undermined phone users’ ability to make informed decisions about the collection of their location information. While InMobi claimed that its software collected geographical whereabouts only when end users provided opt-in consent, the software in fact used nearby Wi-Fi signals to infer locations when permission wasn’t given, FTC officials alleged. InMobi then archived the location information and used it to push targeted advertisements to individual phone users.

Read more on Ars Technica.

Category: BreachesBusinessFeatured NewsU.S.

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