batteries, don't need to show no stinkin' batteries, we have aliens!!
boy people like you sure bring the quality of this list up to that
level i so much enjoy. you know, 3rd grade was the best 3 years of my
life too.
of course i'm assuming you're not stupid enough to use a cell phone
that someone has wired over the switch or programmed it for silent ops,
i mean nobody is that dumb. because that would mean it is turned on,
and invalidates your point.
right?
ll
On Sep 1, 2007, at 2:20 AM, kondrak wrote:
>
> YES! The ONLY way to disable that function is to remove the battery!
> Its not only possible for GPS, but to use it as an audio bug as well,
> even turned off, and invisible to the owner!
>
>
> Tom Valos wrote:
>>
>> can a phone that is TURNED OFF still provide gps signals ???
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> *From:* Paul E. Niedermeyer <mailto:p..._at_pn.com>
>> *To:* TSCM-..._at_googlegroups.com
>> <mailto:TSCM-..._at_googlegroups.com>
>> *Sent:* Thursday, August 30, 2007 5:53 PM
>> *Subject:* [TSCM-L] {1906} Article | CAUGHT BY THE GPS: CELLPHONE
>> TRACKED CITY WORKER DODGING WORK...
>>
>>
>> http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print.php?url=http://
>> www.nypost.com/seven/08302007/news/regionalnews/track_trick.htm
>>
>>
>> http://www.nypost.com/seven/08302007/photos/news007.jpg
>>
>> /* JavaScriptCompressor 0.8 [www.devpro.it], thanks to Dean
>> Edwards
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>> ct,_N,_C,return,hbx,pv,vpc,HBX0200u,gn,nypost,com,acct,DM570110G2DA79E
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>> ,hla,gp,gpn,hcn,hcv,cp,null,cpd,ci,hc1,hc2,hc3,hc4,hrf,pec".split(",")
>> ));
>>
>> New York Post <http://www.nypost.com/>
>>
>> 'TRACK' TRICK
>>
>> By DAVID SEIFMAN City Hall Bureau Chief
>>
>> document.write(' <\/script>');
>> /August 30, 2007/ -- A 21-year employee of the school system could
>> lose his job after officials accused him of repeatedly leaving
>> early
>> - and stunned the worker with data it got by tracking his
>> movements
>> with a city-issued cellphone, The Post has learned.
>>
>> In a precedent-setting case, administrative trial judge Tynia
>> Richard recommended the firing of John Halpin, a veteran
>> supervisor
>> of carpenters, for cutting out before the end of his shift on as
>> many as 83 occasions between March 2 and Aug. 9, 2006.
>>
>> The evidence against Halpin, whose base pay is $300 a day,
>> included
>> time cards that suspiciously appeared stamped on the same machine,
>> even though his duties placed him in different locations each day.
>>
>> But there was a clincher: data gathered through the GPS system on
>> Halpin's cellphone, which he accepted in 2005 without being told
>> it
>> might be used to trace his every move.
>>
>> On March 8, for example, supervisors determined that Halpin was
>> last
>> in Manhattan at 1:31 p.m. and was home in Levittown, L.I., at 2:40
>> p.m. On March 29, Halpin was found at home at 2:38 p.m.
>>
>> The earliest he was caught in Levittown was 1:40 p.m. on June 22.
>>
>> But his shift wasn't supposed to end until 3:30 p.m.
>>
>> Some workers refused the free-phone offer, saying they preferred
>> to
>> use their own cells.
>>
>> Richard said the unsuspecting Halpin "admitted he took the phone
>> because he liked the walkie-talkie and other functions it has."
>>
>> She dismissed concerns about whether the city had to warn Halpin
>> in
>> advance of the cellphone's tracking abilities.
>>
>> "The department [of Education] is not expected to notify its
>> employees of all the methods it may possibly use to uncover their
>> misconduct," Richard decided.
>>
>> "The undisputed intent of issuing the cellphone with GPS was for
>> the
>> department to be able to determine the whereabouts of its
>> supervisors in the field."
>>
>> Rachel Minter, a lawyer who specializes in labor relations, said
>> she
>> knows of very few similar cases because the law hasn't caught up
>> to
>> the technology.
>>
>> "This is a very interesting case because it raises issues very
>> much
>> on the edge," she said.
>>
>> Halpin questioned the reliability of the data and argued that his
>> privacy was invaded, since officials tracked him when he wasn't at
>> work.
>>
>> In fact, the data found Halpin on numerous occasions turned up
>> early
>> for his job, sometimes at 6 a.m. His shift started at 8 a.m.
>>
>> Despite the extra hours Halpin put in without pay, Richard ruled
>> that it didn't mitigate his early departures and recommended he be
>> fired.
>>
>> Halpin has been removed from his duties and is awaiting word on
>> whether Schools Chancellor Joel Klein will follow the
>> administrative
>> judge's recommendation.
>>
>> /david...._at_nypost.com <mailto:david...._at_nypost.com>/
>>
>>
>> Home <http://www.nypost.com/>
>> NEW YORK POST is a registered trademark of NYP Holdings, Inc.
>> NYPOST.COM, NYPOSTONLINE.COM, and NEWYORKPOST.COM
>> are trademarks of NYP Holdings, Inc.
>> Copyright 2007 NYP Holdings, Inc. All rights reserved.
>>
>>
>>
>>>
>
>
> >
Received on Sat Mar 02 2024 - 00:57:27 CST