'My Wife Tracked Me, for Journalism'
Last month a reporter for the New York Times tracked her husband using Apple AirTags, Tiles, and a GPS tracker. (With his permission...) "I was prepared for her to violate my privacy for the sake of journalism," that husband writes today. "But what I was not prepared for was how easily my actions could be misinterpreted." [O]ne day I had to go into New York City for work — and Todd Heisler, a Times photographer, secretly followed me. [My wife] Kashmir was sending him live updates of my location. Confusion reigned almost immediately. As soon as I arrived in Manhattan, Todd captured me walking — or had I been caught in a potentially compromising position? A friend made light of the situation on Twitter after the article was published, saying it was "a nice touch" that the main picture with the article "shows you apparently emerging from a bar at 10 a.m." Needless to say, I was not drinking before lunch, but the diner where I had just eaten breakfast had a "cocktails" sign in the window.... Next, I entered the 72nd Street subway station but quickly doubled back, apparently losing my camera-toting tail in the process. Little did I know, Todd and Kashmir were texting in real time; he was worried I had "made" him. My Jason Bourne-like escape had spooked him. [When Kashmir received the text from the Times' photographer, "I reassured him that my husband is extremely unobservant and was probably just lost."] I was, in fact, oblivious to his presence. In truth, I had left my mask at the diner and had needed to buy another before I could get on the train to Brooklyn. At lunch time, Kashmir texted me, "Are you somewhere fancy?" Perplexed, I responded no. I learned later her location trackers suggested that I had stopped at the private club Dumbo House. Imagine the interpretations! In fact, I was at a food court directly below Dumbo House eating a taco... [W]hen I heard and saw all of these misinterpretations about my day, I couldn't help but think of all the people who might be surveilled without their consent, whether it's by a spouse, an employer or law enforcement. His conclusion? While trackers have legitimate uses, there's also many ways they could be abused — and misinterpreted. Seeing a map of his every movement after the experiment, "it was unnerving to realize that the devices knew where I was, but that they had no idea what I was doing." Or, as his wife puts it, "Even with location trackers and a photographer trailing my husband, I couldn't figure out what he was actually doing that day."
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