- Positioning (telecommunications)
"Mobile positioning", i.e. location based service that discloses the actual coordinates of a mobile phone bearer, is a technology used by
telecommunication companies toapproximate where amobile phone , and thereby also its user, temporaily resides. More properly segregated the term applies more to a locating process rather than a positioning process. Such service is offered as an option of the class of "location-based service s" (LBS) [ [http://to.swang.googlepages.com/ICC2008LBSforMobilessimplifiedR2.pdf "Location Based Services for Mobiles: Technologies and Standards“] , Shu Wang, Jungwon Min and Byung K. Yi, [http://www.ieee-icc.org/ IEEE International Conference on Communication (ICC) 2008] , Beijing, China] .The technology is based on measuring power levels and antenna patterns and uses the concept that a mobile phone always communicates wirelessly with one of the closest base stations, so if you know which base station the phone communicates with, you know that the phone is close to the respective base station.
Advanced systems determine the sector in which the mobile phone resides and roughly estimate also the distance to the base station. Further approximation can be done by
interpolating signals between neighbouring base stations. Qualified services can obtain a precision of down to 50 meters inurban area s where mobile traffic and density of base stations is sufficiently high.Rural and desolate areas may see miles between base stations and therefore determine locations less precisely.Privacy
Locating or positioning touches upon delicate
privacy issues, since it enable someone to check where a person is without the person's consent. Strict ethics and security measures are strongly recommended for services that employ positioning, and the user must give an informed, explicitconsent to a service provider before the service provider can compute positioning data from the user's mobile phone.Officially, the
authorities (like thepolice ) can obtain permission to position phones inemergency cases where people (including criminals) are missing.In
Europe , where most countries have a constitutional guarantee on thesecrecy of correspondence , location data obtained from mobile phone networks is usually given the same protection as the communication itself. TheUnited States however has no explicit constitutional guarantee on theprivacy of telecommunications , so use of location data is limited by law.With tolling systems, as in Germany, the locating of vehicles is equally sensitive to the constitutional guarantee on the
secrecy of correspondence and thus any further use of tolling information beyond deducting the road fee is prohibited. That leads to the strange situation that even obviously criminal intent may not be interfered by such yet available technical means.Alternatives
GPS units, though more costly than a mobile phone, are tailor-made for the purpose of positioning, and provides commercial handsets with a precision of down to 5 meters in the USA.References
See also
*
Location-based service
*GSM localization
*GPS Phone
*Locating
*Mobile dating
*Real Time Locating
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.