CellHawk sureveillance allows police to map individual locations, movements, and interactions without warrant

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CellHawk’s surveillance capabilities go beyond analyzing metadata from cellphone towers. Hawk Analytics claims it can churn out incredibly revealing intelligence from large datasets like ride-hailing records and GPS — information commonly generated by the average American. According to the company’s website, CellHawk uses GPS records in its “unique animation analysis tool,” which, according to company promotional materials, plots a target’s calls and locations over time. “Watch data come to life as it moves around town or the entire county,” the site states.

The tool can also help map interpersonal connections, with an ability to animate more than 20 phones at once and “see how they move relative to each other,” according to a promotional brochure.

The company has touted features that make CellHawk sound more like a tool for automated, continuous surveillance than for just processing the occasional spreadsheet from a cellular company. CellHawk’s website touts the ability to send email and text alerts “to surveillance teams” when a target moves, or enters or exits a particular “location or Geozone (e.g. your entire county border).”

On its website, Hawk Analytics claims this capability can help investigators “view plots & maps of the cell towers used most frequently at the beginning and end of each day.” But in brochures sent to potential clients, it was much more blunt, claiming that CellHawk can help “find out where your suspect sleeps at night.”

Source: Powerful Mobile Phone Surveillance Tool Operates in Obscurity Across the Country
 
Remember Big Brother is watching, so a good reason to turn off location sharing on your device.

Unfortunately, turning these features off only appear to give you anonymity on the surface. The fact is that most phones are signed into a google account or Apple ID which blows anyone’s cover. Most apps (FB, Snapchat, Insta etc) already have a profile on its users and their close network while other “fun” apps mine your data and track habits as well as frequent WiFi networks your phone accesses etc... terrifying how those seemingly innocent technology devices are the biggest tattle tales.
 
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