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GPS Counter Track: Blocking GPS Signals

posted by Satri on Wednesday October 10, @01:12PM   Printer-friendly   Email story  Permalink  Trackback URI  Slashdotthis  Diggthis  Del.icio.us
from the slip-under-stealth-and-prevent-yourself-from-being-tracked dept.
The GeoCarta blog discuss a device named GPS Counter Track promising to block people from tracking you with with hidden GPS. From the commercial website: "The GPS Counter Track is very easy and simple to use. Just plug it in to your cars cigarette lighter and you are good to go. [...] The GPS counter track works off of the L1/L2 GPS Network which is the most common and used by GPS Tracking Devices. The GPS Counter Track will keep your location safe and free from detection. It will work to prevent Real Time GPS Tracking Devices and it will work to disable GPS Tracking recorders." The device sells for $219. I haven't seen indications on its efficiency.

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GPS Trackers Find Novel Applications [+]
Slashdot runs a discussion nourished by a NYTimes article on novel applications using GPS tracking. Personally, I wonder why some of these applications are not driven by RFID instead, which would probably be more economic (despite the range limitation). Their summary: "Inexpensive GPS devices like the Zoombak (which costs just $200 plus $10 a month) have becomes so prevalent that some people are using them routinely to keep tabs on their most precious possessions. Kathy Besa has a Zoombak attached to the collar of her 5-year-old beagle, Buddy. If Buddy wanders more than 20 feet from the house, she gets a text message on her phone that says, 'Buddy has left the premises.' The small size made possible by chip advances over the last two or three years is enabling many novel uses of GPS tracking. An art collector in New York uses one when he transports million-dollar pieces, a home builder is putting them on expensive appliances to track them if they disappear from construction sites, a drug company is using them after millions of dollars in inventory turned up missing, and a mobile phone company is hiding them in some cellphone boxes to catch thieves." See also below numerous related previous stories.
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