Researchers at MIT have found that it takes just four phone calls to reveal your personal information.
A new study led by Massachusetts Institute of Technology found that data derived from mobile phone networks, using just the location of radio masts, could identify the about a vast majority of people from just four pieces of information.
The discovery raises questions over the increasing use by businesses and government agencies of supposedly anonymous data, ‘The Telegraph’ reported. The researchers noted a simply anonymised data set may not contain name, home address, phone number or other obvious identifier, “yet, if individual’s patterns are unique enough,outside information can be used to link the data back to an individual.”
They examined data collected over 15 months from 1.5 million people and found that “human mobility traces are highly unique”. “A list of potentially sensitive professional and personal information that could be inferred about an individual knowing only his mobility trace was published recently by the Electronic Frontier Foundation,” researchers said. “These include the movements of a competitor sales force, attendance of a particular church or an individual’s presence in a motel or at an abortion clinic,”they said.
Researchers noted that such personal data, whether supposedly anonymised or not, was increasingly available. “All together the ubiquity of mobility data sets, the
uniqueness of human traces, and the information that can be inferred from them highlight the importance of understanding the privacy bounds of human mobility,” researchers said.
Artificial efforts to coarsen the data were found to have relatively little effect, they said. “Modern information technologies such as the Internet and mobile phones, however, magnify the uniqueness of individuals, further enhancing the traditional challenges to privacy. Mobility data is among the most sensitive data currently being collected,” researchers said in the Journal Nature.
The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…
The first time I heard about Bitcoin was in the summer of 2018 during a casual conversation…
Open source software is everywhere—used in almost every modern application—but the security challenges it faces…
Argentine President Javier Milei is facing impeachment after the cryptocurrency he endorsed called $LIBRA crashed…
India is targeting US$500 B in electronics production by 2030. Last year July, Niti Aayog…
The IMF predicts that more Indians will use AI every day than in any other…