By George Avalos / Oakland Tribune
Published: January 08. 2012 4:00AM PSTSAN JOSE, Calif. â" Someone who is in a mall or near a favorite restaurant might get a message on their cellphone about a sale at a store or specials on the menu. Or they could be alerted that their child has left the school grounds.
These are just a couple of the possible uses of a new generation of messages, applications and advertisements that go by the moniker âgeo-fencing.â Geo-fencing creates a digital perimeter around a location â" which could be a building, school or entire city â" that enables merchants or others to become aware when a personâs cellphone crosses an electronic boundary.
âIf people know where you are, they can push to you offers that are unique to your location,â said Rob Enderle, principal analyst with San Jose, Calif.-based market researcher Enderle Group. McDonaldâs, Victoriaâs Secret and Best Buy all offer ways for potential customers to get messages on their smartphones about deals or specials at nearby locations.
AT&T has been testing a free ShopAlerts service that sends location-based text messages about merchant offers. San Francisco-based Twitter is devising ways for merchants to deliver city-level advertising tweets to people based on their timeline. Foursquare lets people check in and receive ads and info linked to the areas where they are
Safety pitch
The apps also help people lead safer lives. âItâs like a personal OnStar for you,â Enderle said. âIf you have a problem, injury, safety or security issue, you can structure a service where you can get immediate help.â
Emeryville, Calif.-based Location Labs offers alerts and online reports about the whereabouts of family members, as well as services designed to prevent young motorists from texting while driving. Both of these are based on the mobile phone knowing where people are located or how fast they are traveling.
Location Labs, one of the pioneers in geo-fencing technology, has focused a number of initiatives on safety-oriented efforts, said Tasso Roumeliotis, CEO and founder of the company.
âWe see a lot of paying customers for these applications,â Roumeliotis said, adding that more than 1,000 third-party developers are at work creating new apps for the company.
Its Safely Locate app lets people keep tabs on loved ones through alerts and online activity reports. Safely Drive is geared toward keeping younger drivers from texting or chatting on the phone while they are driving by locking down the phone if the system senses the car is being driven.
Safely Social Monitor keeps parents informed about a childâs social networking activities.
âYou are paying for peace of mind,â Roumeliotis said.
Big brother
But geo-fencing has also raised privacy concerns that can send that peace of mind out the window.
Elise Watkins, a Concord, Calif., resident, does a lot of shopping online with her iPhone, and numerous ads are sent to her phone as a result.
âIâm fine with it going to my email, but not to my phone,â Watkins said. âIâve bought tickets online for events. You have to enter a phone number. Then you start getting text messages after that.â
Watkins has set up a specific email address to receive marketing messages sent to her phone. âIt can be kind of annoying to get ads pushed to your phone,â she said. âIt seems like overkill to me. It interferes with my personal life.â
âPeople are still not entirely at ease with a system that comes into our network from outside,â said Chris Shipley, chief executive officer of Redwood City, Calif.-based Guidewire Group. âThis is still something that people feel a little creepy about.â
During late November, two U.S. shopping malls deployed a system developed by Path Intelligence to track cellphones, hoping to learn more about the shopping habits of their customers. But after an outcry about privacy issues, the two malls, Promenade Temecula in Southern California and Short Pump Town Center in Virginia, shut down the tracking efforts.
âConsumers may have good and valid reasons to use location-sensitive applications,â said Rebecca Jeschke, digital rights analyst with the San Francisco-based Electronic Frontier Foundation. âBut we donât see a good way for consumer to understand who is collecting their information, how itâs being done, and why itâs being done.â
Jeschke says the GPS systems embedded in smartphones put a tracking device in each userâs pocket, raising lots of privacy concerns.
âGeo-fencing gives marketers or the government the chance to track us every day,â she said. âThe technology shows what are our interests, where we go to church, who are our friends.â
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