"Now, if you dig down, the targeting is not about the location of the beauty parlor, drug store or airport, but that in fact you visited a beauty parlor, drug store or airport. The nature of what types of place you visit, not where they are, is the basis for targeting. If you frequent one or more parks, grocery stores, the zoo and maternity stores, you just might be a Mom, the logic goes. And, the logic seems to work."
"Ingress, the Alternate/Augmented Reality (AR) game from Google's Niantic Labs, is a major evolution of mobile gaming. Apparently, it's also a good way to get arrested.
According to a post on Reddit (I know, I know - but stay with me on this), an Ingress player in Ohio was detained by police for his in-game actions. Specifically, he was "hacking a portal" near a police station. His phone had technical difficulties, which led him to linger by the portal/police station for a bit, catching the eye of local law enforcement and leading to the detention.
After the original post, other Ingress players responded with similar stories. One aroused suspicions by wandering around an empty parking lot at night. Another, trying to hack a portal next to an air traffic control station, had to run from the local sheriff. A third was called in for questioning after hacking a portal outside of a "high-traffic drug area.""
daily 9.1
idea to use tech (gps, monitors for pills/drugs/shwatev) to track inmates so that the incarceration process will be more efficient and inmates will have more opportunities to do good and be around good ppl