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roywiggins 17 hours ago

The phone could literally pop up a consent alert asking whether to respond to a GPS ping request from the carrier. Or just not honor the pings at all unless you dialed 911 within the last hour.

This is a specific service inside the phone that looks for messages from the carrier requesting a GPS position, it could just refuse, or lie. It's not the same as cell tower triangulation.

_flux 13 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I can imagine situations where the emergency is noticed by other people that might not be near the location itself, and the person whose location would need to be determined is not able to use the mobile phone, such as could be the case in many accidents.

I think it would be sufficient to just have a log of this information being queried, and cases where the information has been pinged without a legitimate use case would the be investigated.

winstonwinston 16 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-]

The article does not explain in detail how all this works. But educated guess is that if a baseband SoC provides this information, that's it. The phone operating system (iOS, Android) does not get a chance to decide what to do, since baseband soc is a sort of autonomous computer, it has its own firmware, cpu and ram.

roywiggins 16 hours ago | parent [-]

You might not be able to fix this in the OS alone, but phone manufacturers are responsible for the whole phone. The baseband doesn't need to behave that way.

winstonwinston 16 hours ago | parent [-]

Well, yes. But autonomous is acting in accordance with one's duty (a law) rather than one's desires.

hammock 16 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

That’s not happening today. I meant how is it happening today, such that it can only ever happen when you dial 911?