The Secret Service paid for a product that allows the agency to access phone location data, according to Motherboard.
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The Secret Service reportedly paid for a product called Locate X, which allows the agency to access location data from apps on people’s phones. The agency was thus able to bypass measures like obtaining a warrant or court order to get that kind of information, according to a Monday report by Motherboard.
A March report in Protocol stated several government agencies had signed deals with Locate X creator Babel Street after it launched the product. The app anonymously tracks device locations using data gathered by apps on those phones, sources told the publication. US Customs and Border Protection reportedly purchased Locate X, and Motherboard says it’s obtained a document that supports a Babel Street employee’s claim that the Secret Service also used the technology.
The Secret Service and Bable Street didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.
The Secret Service’s contract mentioning Locate X runs from 28, 2017, to September 27, 2018, Motherboard says.
Several apps gather location data, often to help them run more smoothly, but many sell the information they collect to data brokers or to other companies who then use that information in their own products, Motherboard notes. The government is also sometimes involved in those sales, as The Trump administration, for instance, has purchased phone location data from a company called Venntel and uses it for immigration and border enforcement, according to a February report by The Wall Street Journal. The Internal Revenue Service also reportedly purchased a database from Venntel that records millions of American cellphone locations.