New Firefox add-on able track where you are...
- added October 08, 2008
- 6 responses
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- figalmighty
- added this
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The feature, called Geode, is a prototype for the location-tracking technology that will be built into the forthcoming Firefox 3.1.
Geode is designed to work with websites that rely on knowing your location, such as mapping and geotagging services.
A demo application called Food Finder highlights restaurants and cafés in the immediate vicinity on a Google Map.
Existing web services such as Pownce (which lets you send location-tagged photos and messages to friends) and Yahoo's Fire Eagle (which updates your blog and other web services with your current location) will also work with Geode.
Privacy concerns
The prospect of Firefox having the ability to track your location raises obvious privacy fears. Mozilla insists users will remain in complete control.
"With Geode, when a website requests your location a notification bar will ask how much information you want to give that site: your exact location, your neighbourhood, your city, or nothing at all," the Mozilla Labs blog. claims.
Geode uses Skyhook's Loki technology to determine your location from local Wi-Fi hotspots, with Mozilla claiming the technology can map your location to within 10-20 metres in less than a second. That obviously hinges on Loki knowing the co-ordinates of a hotspot in your area: in our brief test this morning in Sussex, it was unable to determine our location.
Mozilla says it plans to refine the technology before the launch of Firefox 3.1. "Geode and the Geolocation Services in Firefox 3.1 will use the same W3C API for Geolocation, meaning that the same Javascript code will work in both," the blog claims.
"The still-in-developement Firefox 3.1 version will allow the user to choose a geolocation service provider, which can either be a peripheral device like a GPS, or a web-based service provider like we've used in Geode."
Barry Collins
Well this is interesting O.O
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- figalmighty
- 1 month ago
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Sounds like it's a good idea, and if, for whatever reason, you don't want Firefox to be tracking your location, just use a different browser...
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Very cool, but I'm guessing if they're in a Wi-Fi enabled area, they'll already know EXACTLY where they are. Good technology though.
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It does sound proper clever (I love being told what is the nearest cinema or stationery shop or ice cream van to me!) but there's something creepy about something, somewhere knowing where I am constantly, even if its just a satellite. I guess if anyone gets kidnapped with their laptop in their pocket it'll be handy for tracking them down. So that's useful.
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- LindseyIndigo
- 1 month ago
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Sounds like just another idea for people to keep a slightly less inconspicuous eye on you. Governments dont just track, think terrorists too.
