To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
Is Android open in your opinion (serious question, opinions seem to vary on that)? It does exactly the same thing, only difference it is implemented sanely - it is limited to 50 fixes.
https://github.com/packetlss/android-locdump
It does not get wiped nor does it expire though (it will prune the data during updates, but not when nothing is happening), so you can use it to figure out he last 50 towers a phone contacted... Even if the phone has been off for an extended period of time.
My point is only that keeping track of stuff like this for the purposes of faster location fixing is not inherently evil - there is a valid reason to do it. It's just in Apple's case they either have a bug (it should be clearing out old data but it isn't) or they are doing it on purpose. Their eventual solution to the problem will make it clear which one it is.
Hanlon's Razor - "Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity"
Edited 2011-04-22 00:32 UTC
https://github.com/packetlss/android-locdump
Not only sanely, but as secure as possible. You need a rooted device to get to the data. I hope that iOS has some protection against leaking that data.





Member since:
2006-01-04
Or just have a community that looks at the code and fix such "problems" before you install it. Works for all the distros.
And anyways, IF the code would have been open it wouldn't have had this "feature" in the first place. Apple thought they could get away with it.