iPhone’s location tracking services a threat to national security – China

Aiphone_5s_5c report by Chinese state broadcaster China Central Television (CCTV) has criticized the iPhone’s ‘Frequent Locations’ feature – an opti-in service that was introduced as part of the iOS 7 update last autumn, warning that it is a threat to national security because of its capacity to track and time-stamp user locations.

‘Frequent Locations’ stores information about the iPhone’s movements which Apple says it uses “to learn places that are significant to you” and personalize services such as “predictive traffic routing”.

The report on the feature by CCTV included testimony from a researcher who described this as “extremely sensitive data,” adding that if this information was accessed on a large scale it could reveal a country’s economic situation and “even state secrets”.

Apple has defended the feature, saying that the data is only processed in the device itself and that the company itself does not track users’ locations.

“We appreciate CCTV’s effort to help educate customers on a topic we think is very important,” said an Apple spokesperson in a statement. “We want to make sure all of our customers in China are clear about what we do and we don’t do when it comes to privacy and your personal data.

“As we have stated before, Apple has never worked with any government agency from any country to create a backdoor in any of our products or services. We have also never allowed access to our servers, and we never will.”

The criticism comes as suspicion surrounding Western surveillance tactics reaches an all-time high in the country. Google has had its various web service disrupted for a month in China and government procurement offices recently banned the purchase of Microsoft’s Windows 8 operating system.

Source: The Indepedent