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Worried about your dog running off? There's a simple tech solution that could give you peace of mind. I'll explain how it works.
The TennStar published the entire "Trannifesto" of gender confused school shooter Audrey Hale in the wake of another shooting down in Georgia. We will talk a bit about the contents which reveal little new - except that the FBI can't get out of its own way to lie to the public. Also some discussion of FARA and Geofence warrants. ______________________________________________________________ Check out BETWEEN THE LINES on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@CatholicVote JOIN OUR LOCALS: https://thekyleseraphinshow.locals.com/subscribe PREPARE or REPAIR: http://PrepareLikeKyle.com (MyPatriotSupply Food Prep) Use PROMO CODE "KYLE" at these sites: http://PatriotCoolers.com/ (Tumblers & Coolers) http://MyPillow.com/Kyle (Pillows/Towels/Bedding) https://matthatjerky.com/kyle (premium Beef Jerky) http://The-Suspendables.com (Show Merch) http://ShieldArms.com - maker of the S10 and S15 magazines (Montana build firearms and accessories)
Today we are yet again talking about everyone's favorite troublesome church, Elevation. Allegedly, Elevation has been Geofencing local churches and advertising their new buildings to them. We are discussing what Geofencing is and asking whether or not it is moral or Christian to Geofence. Plus we are introducing a new format to our intros we hope you enjoy!Support the Show.
Monday – We recap our annual poker tournament. Would you disrupt your wedding because a 15-year ex was in the wedding band? Brandon Kravitz on our NFL predictions and poker. Attorney Ray Traendly on Geofence warrants and poker. Plus, WOKE News, JCS Trivia & You Heard it Here First.
This is the 5th Circuit; the 4th Circuit ruled that they ARE Constitutional. https://www.lehtoslaw.com
welcome to wall-e's tech briefing for wednesday, august 14th! dive into today's top tech stories: google's new pixel 9 phone lineup: first-ever ai-powered android update with 'gemini' system, satellite sos for emergency communication, available in the u.s. (excluding hawaii and alaska) for free within the first two years. federal appeals court ruling on geofence warrants: deemed unconstitutional by the u.s. court of appeals for the fifth circuit, impacting louisiana, mississippi, and texas. decision differs from the fourth circuit's stance. chinese startup weride's autonomous vehicle testing: approval received to test driverless vehicles with passengers in california, limited to san jose and nearby areas, no passenger fares permitted yet. gearing up for u.s. ipo amidst national security concerns. california ai bill sb 1047: set for final vote, targets prevention of ai-driven disasters. proponents stress necessity while silicon valley companies argue it could stifle innovation and burden startups. stay tuned for tomorrow's tech updates!
Geofence warrants, also known as reverse-location warrants, allow law enforcement to request data from technology companies like Google to identify all devices within a specified geographic area during a certain time frame. Critics argue that these warrants are unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment, which protects against unreasonable searches and seizures, for several reasons.Lack of Particularity and Probable Cause: Geofence warrants do not require law enforcement to establish probable cause for each individual whose data is collected. Instead, they broadly capture data from all devices within a certain area, which can include many innocent people unrelated to the crime under investigation. This lack of specificity contrasts with the Fourth Amendment's requirement that warrants must particularly describe the place to be searched and the persons or things to be seized.Overbreadth: These warrants often cover large areas and extended time periods, making them overbroad. They can include locations where suspects are unlikely to be and times when suspects are known not to be present, thus encompassing many innocent people. This broad scope is similar to general warrants, which were explicitly rejected by the framers of the Constitution because they allowed indiscriminate searches.Privacy Concerns: The collection of such vast amounts of location data intrudes significantly on individual privacy. Data from sources like Google's Sensorvault, which stores detailed location information, can reveal intimate details about a person's life, such as where they live, work, and visit, raising substantial privacy concerns.Potential for Misuse and Errors: Geofence warrants can lead to false positives, implicating innocent individuals who happen to be in the area. There have been instances where people were wrongfully detained based on inaccurate location data.Despite these concerns, some courts have upheld geofence warrants if they believe law enforcement acted in good faith or if the warrants met certain statutory requirements. However, the growing use of geofence warrants has sparked significant debate and calls for clearer legal standards to protect privacy and constitutional rights.(commercial at 12:22)To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comSource:https://www.yahoo.com/news/google-says-geofence-warrants-one-215401933.htmlBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-epstein-chronicles--5003294/support.
Geofence warrants, also known as geofence orders or geofence search warrants, are legal tools used by law enforcement agencies to collect location data from electronic devices within a specific geographical area during a particular timeframe. The term "geofence" refers to a virtual boundary set up around a geographical location, often established using GPS or RFID technology. When a device enters or exits this predefined area, it triggers an action, such as sending a notification to the user or recording the event.Here's a breakdown of how geofence warrants typically work:Obtaining the Warrant: Law enforcement agencies must obtain a warrant from a judge or magistrate before deploying a geofence warrant. This process typically involves demonstrating probable cause that a crime has been committed and that location data from electronic devices within a specific area and timeframe may contain evidence relevant to the investigation.Defining the Geofence: The warrant specifies the geographical area where the geofence will be set up. This could be a specific address, neighborhood, city block, or any other defined area. Additionally, the warrant outlines the timeframe during which the data will be collected, which could range from hours to days.Requesting Data from Tech Companies: Once the warrant is obtained, law enforcement agencies approach technology companies, such as mobile carriers, social media platforms, or other service providers, with a request for data from devices within the defined geofenced area during the specified timeframe. This data may include GPS coordinates, timestamps, and other relevant information associated with devices that entered or exited the geofenced area.Analysis of Collected Data: Law enforcement analysts review the collected data to identify patterns, movements, or connections between individuals and events relevant to the investigation. This analysis may involve mapping out the movements of suspects or identifying potential witnesses based on their presence within the geofenced area during the specified timeframe.Privacy and Legal Considerations: Geofence warrants have raised concerns regarding privacy rights and Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. Critics argue that these warrants can lead to the collection of vast amounts of location data from innocent individuals who happen to be in the vicinity of a crime scene. Additionally, there are questions about the accuracy and reliability of location data collected through geofence warrants.Legal Challenges: Geofence warrants have faced legal challenges in various jurisdictions, with courts grappling with issues such as the scope of the warrant, the constitutionality of collecting location data en masse, and the potential for abuse or misuse of this technology by law enforcement agencies.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
In the last month, we have had 3 cases where courts have affirmed electronic device and data search warrants - One from Virginia on a device, one from the 4th Cir. on a device, and the 4th Circuit's "Geofence" ruling. Today we discuss those rulings.
First up is an update to the Chinese drone ban discussion. The Senate version of the 2025 NDAA was released this week, without the Countering CCP Drones Act language in the bill. This is a great win, but we can't let up. The NDAA is an act that must pass every year and Speaker of the House Mike Johnson said that Congress plans to put together a China-focused bill later this year. Please continue to educate and talk to your Senators and Representatives. Let them know that this and other legislation that would ban Chinese drones is not okay. To see how you can get involved, visit the DAA's website! Next up, a drone show in Washington State lost 55 drones due to a malfunction. Starlight Drone Shows was scheduled to perform a drone show over Angle Lake, WA on the 4th of July. Despite initial GPS locks, 55 drones out of 200 lost GPS and landed in the lake. None of the drones flew away or went into the Geofence, showing that programming worked as expected. The remainder of the show was cancelled and 145 other drones were successfully recovered. Starlight was in charge of the Sun N Fun show that we attended in April in Lakeland Florida with over 500 drones, which went flawlessly for 2 nights during the show. We'll keep you updated if we see more about what caused the GPS loss. Third up, Freefly has released Astro Prime! The new Astro Prime has a 28-minute flight time with a Sony LR1, a new battery system guaranteed to 500 cycles, and a pro controller. Payloads include a Sony LR1 as a main camera with additional payloads including Wiris cameras, Sony Alpha 7R-IV, Green Valley Lidar, Sentra Multispectral cameras, Internal labs LiDAR, Hovermap LiDAR, Rock Robotic LiDAR, Micasense multispectral cameras, and more. The Astro Prime is also NDAA Compliant and Blue UAS, made in Woodinville, WA. Pricing for the Astro Prime is $27,000 for the aircraft only while a kit including batteries, controller, and aircraft is $32,250. Pretty cool aircraft from Freefly! Last up, Watts's Innovations appears to have shut down and is "Shifting to new horizons". It's unclear what the new horizons are, but we wish the folks over at Watt's Innovations the very best! Have a great week, and we'll see you on Monday for the Live! https://www.armed-services.senate.gov/press-releases/sasc-completes-markup-of-national-defense-authorization-act-for-fiscal-year-2025 https://www.armed-services.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/fy25_ndaa_bill_text.pdf https://droneadvocacyalliance.com/ https://www.flyingmag.com/drones/questions-remain-after-july-fourth-drone-show-falls-apart/ https://dronexl.co/2024/07/08/freefly-astro-prime-drone/ https://store.freeflysystems.com/collections/astro https://wattsinnovations.com/
A lot has been made about right to privacy as it relates to DNA, but did you know right now you are sharing more than enough information with big information companies? Brett and Alice break down how Geofence Warrants work, what they provide private businesses and law enforcement, and how this technology relates to the Fourth Amendment.
Imagine being a suspect for simply walking near a crime scene. That's the reality of a mass, warrantless surveillance tool called a geofence warrant The post Caught in the Crosshairs? How Geofence Warrants Turn Innocent People into Suspects first appeared on Tenth Amendment Center.
Geofence warrants, also known as geofence orders or geofence search warrants, are legal tools used by law enforcement agencies to collect location data from electronic devices within a specific geographical area during a particular timeframe. The term "geofence" refers to a virtual boundary set up around a geographical location, often established using GPS or RFID technology. When a device enters or exits this predefined area, it triggers an action, such as sending a notification to the user or recording the event.Here's a breakdown of how geofence warrants typically work:Obtaining the Warrant: Law enforcement agencies must obtain a warrant from a judge or magistrate before deploying a geofence warrant. This process typically involves demonstrating probable cause that a crime has been committed and that location data from electronic devices within a specific area and timeframe may contain evidence relevant to the investigation.Defining the Geofence: The warrant specifies the geographical area where the geofence will be set up. This could be a specific address, neighborhood, city block, or any other defined area. Additionally, the warrant outlines the timeframe during which the data will be collected, which could range from hours to days.Requesting Data from Tech Companies: Once the warrant is obtained, law enforcement agencies approach technology companies, such as mobile carriers, social media platforms, or other service providers, with a request for data from devices within the defined geofenced area during the specified timeframe. This data may include GPS coordinates, timestamps, and other relevant information associated with devices that entered or exited the geofenced area.Analysis of Collected Data: Law enforcement analysts review the collected data to identify patterns, movements, or connections between individuals and events relevant to the investigation. This analysis may involve mapping out the movements of suspects or identifying potential witnesses based on their presence within the geofenced area during the specified timeframe.Privacy and Legal Considerations: Geofence warrants have raised concerns regarding privacy rights and Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable searches and seizures. Critics argue that these warrants can lead to the collection of vast amounts of location data from innocent individuals who happen to be in the vicinity of a crime scene. Additionally, there are questions about the accuracy and reliability of location data collected through geofence warrants.Legal Challenges: Geofence warrants have faced legal challenges in various jurisdictions, with courts grappling with issues such as the scope of the warrant, the constitutionality of collecting location data en masse, and the potential for abuse or misuse of this technology by law enforcement agencies.to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.com
Interview with Leading Advertising CEO Jeff Swartz Are you ready to learn how Geofencing and other Digital marketing tactics can grow your business? Then let's say hello to Jeff Swartz, CEO of Ethic Advertising Agency (www.ethic-ads.com). Jeff Swartz is also an advertising entrepreneur, ad tech creator, and Founder of Qujam. Established in 2014, Ethic Advertising delivers hyper-targeted digital advertising solutions. They're ranked among the 50 best agencies in the U.S [caption id="attachment_167824" align="alignright" width="400"] Jeff Swartz is CEO of Ethic Advertising Agency and an expert on Digital Advertising[/caption] Subjects discussed in podcast include: • What exactly is Geofence advertising? • How can small businesses take advantage of GeoFence technology? • Good first steps to get started with geofence advertising • Qujam - the first do-it-yourself Geofence Advertising platform for small businesses. • What's the latest on the of foundation of digital marketing - display banner ads? • Should you do Digital Audio Advertising? • Advice on Native Advertising • Using Search Engine Marketing (SEM) to rank higher in search results • Social media marketing on Facebook, Linked-In and Twitter • What are good ways to get started with video and video pre-roll • What is one thing a podcast listener should do tomorrow morning, to improve his or her digital marketing? Episode Sponsor: City America * https://CityAmerica.com Interview Guest [caption id="attachment_167826" align="alignleft" width="1000"] Jeff Swartz, CEO of Ethic Advertising Agency[/caption] Your Host More Links Subscribe to Home Business TV YouTube Channel (Click) Subscribe to the Home Business Podcast Home-Based Business Start-Up Guide
Google will soon allow users to store their location data on their devices rather than on Google's servers. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Did Google just kill geofence warrants? Intel wants you to know it's in the AI game. Could we get a foldable iPad before we get a foldable iPhone? Soon, maybe your tv really will be spying on you to deliver ads. The AI stuffed toy that Grimes has partnered with. And, of course, The Weekend Longreads Suggestions.Sponsors:Miro.com/podcastPlanet Money PodcastLinks:Is This the End of Geofence Warrants? (The EFF)Intel unveils new AI chip to compete with Nvidia and AMD (CNBC)Report: Apple has ‘no concrete timeline' for a foldable iPad, focused on OLED displays instead (9to5Mac)Marketing Company Claims That It Actually Is Listening to Your Phone and Smart Speakers to Target Ads (404Media)Cruise slashes 24% of self-driving car workforce in sweeping layoffs (TechCrunch)Grimes is working on an interactive AI toy for kids. Meet Grok. (Washington Post)Weekend Longreads Suggestions:OpenAI's Ilya Sutskever Has a Plan for Keeping Super-Intelligent AI in Check (Wired)Tesla Autopilot Recall Threatens Its Defense in Lawsuits Over Crashes (Bloomberg)Microsoft's Digital Crime Unit Goes Deep on How It Disrupts Cybercrime (Wired)https://www.instagram.com/techmemeridehomepod/See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
A VerySpatial Podcast | Discussions on Geography and Geospatial Technologies
News: 3Dntm Gridded US Census data coming? Geofence warrants Customs and border patrol to stop buying phone location data Unity “install” charges announced Topic: This week we talk to Anthony Villanti, Managing Director & Founder of GapMaps about their expansion into the North America markets Events: Geo Week 2024: 11-13 February, Denver, CO Game Developer Conference: 18-22 March, San Francisco, CA Music: Stay Here by Art Grad
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan opens an investigation into FBI's use of “geofence warrants,” a type of broad warrant which seizes all data from everyone using geo-fencing or phone data, by tracking Americans to pinpoint whether any crimes were committed without probable cause. The Ohio Congressman comments that these are similar to “general warrants” in English Law that the Founding Fathers explicitly rejected in the Fourth Amendment of the Constiution. Jordan says that legislation is being introduced to stop these types of broad warrants saying, for example with “Bank of America, [the FBI] will have to get a warrant to get this information, [the Bank] can't be just turning it over, there has to be a specific warrant, that is our system, that is what this country was founded on.” Saying, “think about it, would Sam Adam think this is okay? Would John Adams? Would George Washington? Would any of those great Americans who started this experiment in Liberty we call America, the greatest nation ever, would they approve of what we're seeing?” The Ohio Congressman says Republicans will be pursuing “legislation and frankly will also look at the appropriations process and how we can use the power of the purse, the power of the appropriations” to look at how “American tax dollars” are being spent to influence this. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
On our geocaching podcast today, we discuss the big news of “reducing the Adventure Lab geofence limit” and share some opinions and perspectives from many geocachers. We also share a geocaching opinion on wet logs, feedback on ways to share geocaching out in the field (and a great resource), mixed up souvenirs and much more. […] The post Show 837.0: AL Geofence Limit Change appeared first on PodCacher: Geocaching Goodness.
Roman Polanski and his avoidance of justice is the epitome of Hollywood privilege. For decades the movers and shakers in Hollywood abused people with impunity, knowing that they had a firm grip on not only the industry, but those who enforced the law. Now, after decades of avoiding transparency, more details are becoming available about how Polanski was able to get out of the country just ahead of his arrest.(commercial at 14:48)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonamail.comsource:https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/celebrity/roman-polanski-fled-after-u-s-judge-hinted-he-would-renege-on-rape-plea-deal-unsealed-transcript/ar-AAZHa9z?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=3c661648dc164de58b0fda43dd7f69f7This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5003294/advertisement
Roman Polanski and his avoidance of justice is the epitome of Hollywood privilege. For decades the movers and shakers in Hollywood abused people with impunity, knowing that they had a firm grip on not only the industry, but those who enforced the law. Now, after decades of avoiding transparency, more details are becoming available about how Polanski was able to get out of the country just ahead of his arrest.(commercial at 6:00)to contact me:bobbycapucci@protonamail.comsource:https://www.msn.com/en-us/movies/celebrity/roman-polanski-fled-after-u-s-judge-hinted-he-would-renege-on-rape-plea-deal-unsealed-transcript/ar-AAZHa9z?ocid=msedgntp&cvid=3c661648dc164de58b0fda43dd7f69f7This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5080327/advertisement
Justin Croxton, an Inc 5000 entrepreneur, co-founder, digital enthusiast, father, and husband, is the Managing Partner of Propellant Media. He is dedicated to helping enterprises implement cutting-edge lead generation solutions, addressing the challenges of wasted advertising spend and the struggle to find digital agencies that deliver positive ROI. Propellant Media offers innovative, profit-driven marketing programs that drive engagement, search engine traffic, and revenue for brands and organizations. Their tailored solutions include lead generation, geofencing marketing, Pay Per Lead platforms, and other digital advertising services such as AdWords. In addition to his work at Propellant Media, Justin hosts a compelling podcast called "Blood, Sweat & Digital." This podcast features the gritty stories of executives and business owners who have successfully scaled their enterprises using data and digital strategies. If you think you'd make a great guest for the podcast, reach out to Justin to begin the vetting process.
Episode 1968 - How should we pray? We are to love one another. Another booster approved for five year olds. Will these children be sterilized hermaphrodites? Controversial self defense case dismissed. Geofence surveillance is 1984 on steroids. Judge denies requests from Jan 6 defendants to cross examine FBI agent on leaked messages. Plus much more. High energy must listen show!
They're watching…and weaponizing technology. Find out more about the show and where you can watch it at TheDavidKnightShow.com If you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show You can now support the show while purchasing gold and silver: www.davidknight.gold
Ever wonder how the government is accessing private citizens' data and using it to target individuals without evidence of "wrongdoing" (like with January 6th)? If so, you won't want to miss the latest episode of The Brian Nichols Show. Join Brian Nichols as he talks with Connor Boyack, the head of the Libertas Institute, a non-profit organization that advocates for laws to increase freedom. In this episode, they delve into the government's ability to use geofence warrants to track individuals and their phones, and the technology behind these warrants that allows the government to collect and store data about the location of devices for years. But that's not all. Connor shares a disturbing story about his friend Scott, who was interrogated by the FBI without an attorney present simply because he was near the Capitol on J6. This episode will leave you thinking about the government's use of private information and how it affects our individual freedoms. Tune in now for an eye-opening conversation that you won't want to miss! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Standing Out: A Daily Podcast About Sales, Marketing and Leadership
On Episode 214 of Standing Out, Lucas Schorer of Kestrel Insights and Trey talk about his journey to start Kestral Insights, how he sees location information impacting the industry, and what has been his greatest challenge so far in selling geofence data. Standing Out is a sales, marketing & leadership podcast powered by BETA Consulting Group, created to highlight best practices from industry leaders with incredible experience and insights! The goal is to entertain, educate & inspire individuals & companies to improve their sales, marketing & leadership development outcomes.
Tanner Jones, your host and Vice President of Business Development at Consultwebs, welcomes you to another episode of the LAWsome Podcast by Consultwebs. In today's episode, Tanner is accompanied by Chris Seminatore, the managing partner at getgeofencing.com. As one of the leading location-based advertising companies, Getgeofencing empowers local businesses to re-target audiences, find prospects and grow their brand awareness and market. Link: https://www.consultwebs.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/The-Consultwebs-Decision-Making-Handbook.pdf Key Takeaways: 0:19 Introduction 1:35 What geofencing marketing is 3:40 Benefits of geofencing 5:10 Best practices for law firm geofencing 6:11 Practice areas and geofencing 9:30 Legal and ethical guidelines for geofencing 11:00 What geofencing marketing is not 12:38 Last thoughts Best way to contact Chris Seminatore: https://www.getgeofencing.com/ Discover More About the Podcast and Consultwebs: Subscribe to the LAWsome Podcast by Consultwebs on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, and Spotify Follow Consultwebs on social for legal marketing updates: Facebook Instagram Twitter Linkedin YouTube
If you are utilizing ads to market your business or service, have you thought about the fact that you could be wasting time and money if your ads are being viewed by people that are not your ideal audience and customer? With Geofencing technology, you can serve ads to people based on their location and places they visit, which might tell you about their intentions to buy. This is a cost-effective way to target people that are most likely to need your product or services so that you are not wasting advertising dollars on people that you don't want to target. Today's guest is here to tell us all about this fascinating and incredibly useful marketing technology.Justin Croxton is the CEO of Propellant Media, a geofencing marketing and omnichannel paid media agency with offices in Atlanta and Charlotte. Leading with geofencing marketing allows agencies and brands to build comprehensive digital marketing full funnel strategies translating into leads, sales, branding, and engagement.In this episode, Justin shares his journey to entrepreneurship and having the privilege of seeing his dad own his own business and the freedom that allowed. Getting into the business space, Justin realized that people do business with people, so it's important to always lead with value and stand out from the crowd. This thinking got Justin to where he is today in helping business owners save money by directly targeting their audiences. Tune in for more!Key highlights:Why Justin chose to work on Geofencing advertisingHow can we be different and stand out from the competition?What is Geofencing marketing?Why is Geofencing great?Why is it called Geofencing?Can you Geofence an event?Are there certain platforms that are better to use?Do certain ads do better than others?Marketing mistakes Justin commonly sees madeConnect with Justin Croxton:Website: propellant.mediaLinkedIn: Justin CroxtonConnect with Eric:Be sure to connect with me in the Lead Sell Grow - The Human Experience Mastermind Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/leadsellgrow/Pick up your copy of B2B Sales Secrets HereLearn more about our services: www.TheGoalGuide.comImprove your sales and stay connected – Free Gifts Here https://shor.by/TheGoalGuide
Ryan and Emily discuss Biden's response to Classified Documents being discovered in his office, Flights grounded across the US in a major airline disaster, historic flooding occurring all over California, a dedication to Aaron Swartz a major advocate of Net Neutrality, privacy violations against January 6th, Tesla's autopilot crashes and stock falling, GOP going after defunding the IRS, and Ro Khanna in studio to talk about a new bill for American Industrial Policy.To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show uncut and 1 hour early visit: https://breakingpoints.supercast.com/To listen to Breaking Points as a podcast, check them out on Apple and SpotifyApple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/breaking-points-with-krystal-and-saagar/id1570045623 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Kbsy61zJSzPxNZZ3PKbXl Merch: https://breaking-points.myshopify.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoicesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ryan and Emily discuss Biden's response to Classified Documents being discovered in his office, Flights grounded across the US in a major airline disaster, historic flooding occurring all over California, a dedication to Aaron Swartz a major advocate of Net Neutrality, privacy violations against January 6th, Tesla's autopilot crashes and stock falling, GOP going after defunding the IRS, and Ro Khanna in studio to talk about a new bill for American Industrial Policy. To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show uncut and 1 hour early visit: https://breakingpoints.supercast.com/ To listen to Breaking Points as a podcast, check them out on Apple and Spotify Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/breaking-points-with-krystal-and-saagar/id1570045623 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4Kbsy61zJSzPxNZZ3PKbXl Merch: https://breaking-points.myshopify.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ryan Paterson, President of Unplugged discusses the threat of today's relaxed mobile security, data hacking, privacy concerns, and how gain a peace of mind with the future of mobile technology.
This is a compilation of some of the most compelling stories of the week.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, we are joined by Matthew Esworthy, partner at Bowie-Jensen LLP, to discuss geofence warrants and their use by law enforcement in investigating the January 6 insurrection. Geofence warrants involve court issued warrants for geolocation data from Google. These warrants were sealed and have only recently come to light through motions to suppress the evidence obtained from the geofence warrants. We explore Google's process for responding to the 10,000 warrants it receives annually and the constitutional and legal issues swirling around them.
It's the FBI's biggest investigation ever. Looking into who was in Washington on Jan.6 and who stormed the Capitol. It has also included the biggest ever request of phone data from geofence warrants. Google has provided data from over 5,000 devices as the FBI has tried to narrow their search to pinpoint suspects. Google also has a three-step process for these types of warrants to help protect as much privacy as possible and only provide info on those most likely to have commit a crime. We are only learning more about this now as lawyers for one suspect are looking to throw out the geofence evidence in court. Mark Harris, contributor to Wired, joins us for what to know. Next, if you weathered the pandemic storm and stuck with your employer over the last couple of years, then you very well could be underpaid. The tight labor market has led to a lot of movement and forced employers to try and lure new candidates with bigger paychecks and more work benefits. That has led to a divide with current employees as salaries for new hires are on average 7% higher than existing workers. Aki Ito, senior correspondent at Business Insider, joins us for more.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Google provided investigators with location data for more than 5,000 devices as part of the federal investigation into the attack on the US Capitol. Thanks for listening to WIRED. Check back in tomorrow to hear more stories from WIRED.com.
Google provided investigators with location data for more than 5,000 devices as part of the federal investigation into the attack on the US Capitol. Thanks for listening to WIRED. Check back in tomorrow to hear more stories from WIRED.com.
Geofence marketing is a type of marketing that uses GPS to trigger a response from a consumer when they enter or leave a predetermined geographic area. This technology can be used to deliver targeted content to consumers based on their location. Justin and his agency, Propellant Media are experts in driving this type of targeted marketing, helping businesses use geofence marketing to collect data about consumer behavior and to track foot traffic in a specific location. Tap in to see how learning this techniques could be EXACTLY what you're missing in your business! ------- We're FINALLY on YouTube! Which means you can WATCH this interview here! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC_Cooszw61dODljoOu4ctyg WE JUST OPENED ENROLLMENT TO OUR EXCLUSIVE COMMUNITY FOR WEEKLY MEET UPS, TRAININGS, AND EVENTS -- https://www.patreon.com/themdmpod?fan_landing=true&view_as=public Get your Millionaire Merch! https://www.themdmpodcast.com/shop Check out all of the gear and software we use! https://quiy.univer.se/mdmpodcast Also keep up with us on Instagram @themdm_pod https://www.instagram.com/themdm_pod Tweet with us! Million Dollar Community https://twitter.com/themdm_pod Promote your business to over 100,000 ears on The MDM Podcast for Black Biz Fridays; https://calendly.com/quiyspeaksllc/black-biz-fridays Loving the show? Please leave us a review! ------- Episode Resources: Get your copy of Lead From the Front! https://www.themdmpodcast.com/product-page/book-lead-from-the-front Propellant Media | https://propellant.media/ Propellant on Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/propellantmedia/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/themdm-pod/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/themdm-pod/support
Geofence warrants are the new tool that local law enforcement uses to soak up data for further criminal investigations. Geofence warrants allow police agencies to gather data on every person in a specified area for a certain period of time. Traditional warrants, by contrast, are narrowly tailored to gather information on a specified person. And in that geofence area, they can suck up data from any member of the public and track such things as who's going to a known drug house. This could cause such mislabeling problems as what if you're going to a friend's house that happens to live next to a drug house. The question is that this is going to possibly be one of the upcoming constitutional arguments coming down the pipeline. My listener wants my opinion on cops using geofencing and do I believe it's constitutional. Got a question you want answered on the podcast? Call 614-859-2119 and leave us a voicemail. Steve will answer your question on the next podcast! Submit your questions to http://www.lawyertalkpodcast.com/ (www.lawyertalkpodcast.com). Recorded at Channel 511, a production of 511 South High Media LLC. Stephen E. Palmer, Esq. has been practicing criminal defense almost exclusively since 1995. He has represented people in federal, state, and local courts in Ohio and elsewhere. Though he focuses on all areas of criminal defense, he particularly enjoys complex cases in state and federal courts. He has unique experience handling and assembling top defense teams of attorneys and experts in cases involving allegations of child abuse (false sexual allegations, false physical abuse allegations), complex scientific cases involving allegations of DUI and vehicular homicide cases with blood alcohol tests, and any other criminal cases that demand jury trial experience. Steve has unique experience handling numerous high publicity cases that have garnered national attention. For more information about Steve and his law firm, visit https://www.ohiolegaldefense.com/ (Yavitch & Palmer Co., L.P.A.) You can also find Lawyer Talk on these platforms: Rumble: LawyerTalkPodcast Brighteon: LawyerTalkPodcast Gab: @LawyerTalkPodcast GETTR: @LawyerTalk Copyright 2022 Stephen E. Palmer - Attorney At Law
This week we discuss the Stack Overflow Dev Survey, Securing the Supply Chain and Slack Huddles. Plus, some thoughts on coffee down under. Runner-up Titles Waiting for my wife to get up and out of the bedroom/office My wife is still asleep I feel a Liberal Arts rant coming on That's not the full stack baby How deep does this chasm go? This was your chance to own the SaaS 10 years ago Rundown Starbucks down under (https://twitter.com/franchisewolf/status/1541032303861739520) Why there are almost no Starbucks in Australia (https://www.cnbc.com/2018/07/20/starbucks-australia-coffee-failure.html) Survey Says Stack Overflow Developer Survey 2022 (https://survey.stackoverflow.co/2022/) The 10th Annual Open Source Jobs Report - Linux Foundation (https://www.linuxfoundation.org/tools/the-10th-annual-open-source-jobs-report/?utm_campaign=OSSUMMIT-2022&utm_content=212390733&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&hss_channel=tw-14706299) Supply Chain Aqua Security and CIS release first formal guidelines for software supply chain (https://flip.it/I3T0Nc) Direct link to CIS Doc (https://workbench.cisecurity.org/benchmarks/7555/sections/942026) Chain Bench (https://github.com/aquasecurity/chain-bench) The 4th S of Software Supply Chain Security (https://www.slim.ai/blog/the-4-s-s-of-software-supply-chain-security.html) Productivity The Future of Slack Looks a Lot Like Zoom (https://www.wired.com/story/the-future-of-slack-looks-a-lot-like-zoom/) Discord Improved My Marriage (https://www.nytimes.com/wirecutter/blog/discord-improved-my-marriage/) IBM's first cloudy mainframes scheduled to launch June 30 (https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/29/ibm_cloud_mainframe_launch/) Relevant to your Interests Netflix Cuts 300 Employees In New Round of Layoffs (https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/business/digital/netflix-cuts-300-employees-in-new-round-of-layoffs-1235157991/) Remote Workers Make More Money, Cloud Salary Survey Says (https://thenewstack.io/remote-workers-make-more-money-cloud-salary-survey-says/) Amazon has a plan to make Alexa mimic anyone's voice (https://www.reuters.com/technology/amazon-has-plan-make-alexa-mimic-anyones-voice-2022-06-22/) Twitter to expand into long-form content with upcoming Twitter Notes feature (Update: confirmed) – TechCrunch (https://techcrunch.com/2022/06/21/twitter-to-expand-into-long-form-content-with-upcoming-twitter-notes-feature/) Google is paying the Wikimedia Foundation for better access to information (https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/22/23178245/google-paying-wikimedia-foundation-information) Oracle slashes minimum commitment for on-prem cloud (https://www.theregister.com/2022/06/23/oracle_on_prem_cloud/) Zendesk to Be Acquired by Investor Group Led by Hellman & Friedman and Permira for $10.2 Billion (https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20220624005233/en/Zendesk-to-Be-Acquired-by-Investor-Group-Led-by-Hellman-Friedman-and-Permira-for-10.2-Billion?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosprorata&stream=top) He's the first buyer of the electric F-150. Why he's the future of the car industry (https://www.npr.org/2022/06/20/1104920656/ford-electric-f150-lightning-electric-vehicles-automakers) Here's Google's letter saying employees can relocate to states with abortion rights (https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/24/23182288/google-letter-email-employees-roe-v-wade-decision) Report: Apple is gearing up to launch a ‘flood' of new devices starting this fall (https://www.theverge.com/2022/6/26/23183875/apple-gearing-up-launch-flood-new-devices-this-fall-m2-chip-macbook-iphone-14-watch-series-9) Valorant Is Planning to Monitor Voice Chat, Tests Begin Next Month (https://www.ign.com/articles/valorant-monitor-voice-chat-tests-begin-next-month) Politics trumps business in Truth Social's war on Big Tech (https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/usa-trump-truth-social/) Geofence and keyword warrants (https://thehustle.co/06282022-geofence-warrants/) The GitOps market: driving progressive delivery and experimentation's expansion by The Art of Modern Ops (https://soundcloud.com/user-718131608/the-gitops-market-driving-progressive-delivery-and-experimentations-expansion/s-K1R91NkC4DD?si=067997b06f4e49c6b2ca6ce2fa670e08&utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing) Jeffrey Snover retires (https://twitter.com/jsnover/status/1541447375369097217) Pinterest CEO steps down, Google executive to take over in e-commerce push (https://www.cnn.com/2022/06/28/tech/pinterest-ceo/index.html) VMware Unveils vSphere+ and vSAN+ (https://news.vmware.com/releases/vmware-unveils-vsphere-plus-and-vsan-plus) Consentomatic (https://consentomatic.au.dk/) Atlassian is 20 years old and unprofitable (https://www.smartcompany.com.au/startupsmart/analysis/atlassian-unprofitable-valuation-adam-schwab/) Google Workspace head Javier Soltero is leaving the company (https://www.protocol.com/bulletins/google-workspace-javier-soltero-leaving) DevOps is a failure | lbr. (https://leebriggs.co.uk/blog/2022/06/21/devops-is-a-failure) Developer-Led Landscape: Complexity, Automation & A Future of Autonomous Development (https://tylerjewell.substack.com/p/complexity-automation-autonomous-development?utm_source=email) How Thomas Kurian made Google Cloud into an enterprise-first company (https://www.protocol.com/enterprise/google-cloud-ceo-thomas-kurian) Nonsense New favorite #barcelona #bar #travel #spain #abroad (https://www.tiktok.com/@sarahhands/video/7112453214980607275) SXSW expands to Australia for 2023 (https://www.kxan.com/news/local/austin/sxsw-expands-to-australia-for-2023/) Listener Feedback There are indeed a Smart Sprinkler System: Rachio Smart Sprinkler Controllers (https://rachio.com/) and Rain Bird (https://www.rainbird.com/professionals/products/controllers) Conferences THAT Conference Wisconsin (https://that.us/call-for-counselors/wi/2022/), July 25, 2022 Discount code: SDTFriendsWI50 for $50 off 4-Day everything ticket Discount code:: SDTFriendsWI25 for $25 off 3-Day Camper ticket DevOpsDayLA (https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/19x/devops-day-la) is happening at SCALE19x (https://www.socallinuxexpo.org/scale/19x), July, 29th, 2022 Discount code: DEVOP VMware Explore 2022, August 29 – September 1, 2022 (https://www.vmware.com/explore.html?src=so_623a10693ceb7&cid=7012H000001Kb0hQAC) SpringOne Platform (https://springone.io/?utm_source=cote&utm_medium=podcast&utm_content=sdt), SF, December 6–8, 2022 THAT Conference Texas Call For Counselors (https://that.us/call-for-counselors/tx/2023/) Jan 16-19, 2023, SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). 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Last month, a federal judge in Richmond, Virginia ruled that the use of a geofence warrant to make an arrest in a robbery case was unconstitutional because it violated the Fourth Amendment. Civil liberties advocates have raised concerns about geofence warrants for a long time because they give police data for anyone whose phone was in a given area during a specific timeframe. The Takeaway speaks with Jennifer Granick, surveillance and cybersecurity counsel with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, about what this latest ruling means for the use of geofence warrants going forward.
Last month, a federal judge in Richmond, Virginia ruled that the use of a geofence warrant to make an arrest in a robbery case was unconstitutional because it violated the Fourth Amendment. Civil liberties advocates have raised concerns about geofence warrants for a long time because they give police data for anyone whose phone was in a given area during a specific timeframe. The Takeaway speaks with Jennifer Granick, surveillance and cybersecurity counsel with the ACLU Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project, about what this latest ruling means for the use of geofence warrants going forward.
Get fat segment. Egg pizza. The TikTok. Hershey Kiss vanilla frosting taste test. City of College Station update. Geofence warrants. Today's bad story about Facebook. College basketball.
In the last couple of weeks, a US District Court and a Fairfax Circuit Court issued rulings on so-called "geofence" warrants directed to Google, seeking Google location data. This week, we review those rulings in detail.
Are geofence warrants running roughshod over the first and fourth amendments? Or are they an innocuous law enforcement tool that's really no constitutional violation at all? The BTLJ Podcast speaks with renowned constitutional law experts Erwin Chemerinsky and Orin Kerr to get some guidance. Hosted by Ben Brokesh, Chris Musachio, Hazim Alwazir, Hannah Brown, and Meg Sullivan. Produced by BTLJ Podcast Editors Isabel Jones and Seth Bertolucci and Senior Online Content Editors Thomas Horn and Karnik Hajjar
Public relations campaigns can work wonders when it comes to generating awareness and interest in your business, but they can also be expensive without any guarantee of success. Geofence advertising may offer an effective PR boost that's more affordable than traditional forms of advertising. Jeff Swartz, the founder and CEO of Ethic Advertising Agency, shares how it works and why it could be the next big thing in PR campaigns today.Mentioned in this episode: 9 Reasons Why Advertising Doesn't Work eBook Listen + Subscribe on Stitcher or Apple Podcasts© Molly McPherson 2021
In an age where Technology rules the day it is easy for the government to collect data en masse. In todays episode we dive into that issue and discuss the use of Geofence Warrants and how they are unconstitutional. To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comSource:https://www.yahoo.com/news/google-says-geofence-warrants-one-215401933.html
In this episode, host Bidemi Ologunde talked about the delicate balance between security and privacy, in terms of how geofence warrants are being used to arrest the rioters that breached the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.A link to the Capitol Breach Cases.Please send questions, comments, and suggestions to bidemi@thebidpicture.com. You can also get in touch on LinkedIn, Twitter, the Clubhouse app (@bid), and the Wisdom app (@bidemi).Support the show
Operation Kitten Rescue :: Puberty blockers and kids :: Pharmacy companies have every reason to push the trans agenda :: Airline vaccine mandates could kill more people than it saves :: Geofence and keyword :: Algorithms are so successful at predicting us :: Asch's line experiment & conformity :: Vaccine side effects :: Show: 2021-10-06 Aria, Nikki, Lori.
Operation Kitten Rescue :: Puberty blockers and kids :: Pharmacy companies have every reason to push the trans agenda :: Airline vaccine mandates could kill more people than it saves :: Geofence and keyword :: Algorithms are so successful at predicting us :: Asch's line experiment & conformity :: Vaccine side effects :: Show: 2021-10-06 Aria, Nikki, Lori.
A WIRED investigation has found 45 federal criminal cases that cite Google geolocation data to place suspects inside the US Capitol during the January 6 riot.
A WIRED investigation has found 45 federal criminal cases that cite Google geolocation data to place suspects inside the US Capitol during the January 6 riot.
Catch up on the most important news today in 2 minutes or less. Get even more news you can use with the Tech in Two newsletter. Sign up here: https://www.wired.com/tt
Catch up on the most important news today in 2 minutes or less. Get even more news you can use with the Tech in Two newsletter. Sign up here: https://www.wired.com/tt
Party bus for a field trip… Headlines and a lie / Samuel Adams / Apple / Rwanda… Hawaiian tourist in trouble… PA man in trouble over 43cents… News fall shows are happening… Geofence warrants… Kevin Bacon new film LGBTQIA+ empowerment tale, ugh… Hollywood dubbed liberal… Subscribe to the YouTube Channel… Email to Chewingthefat@theblaze.com Subscribe www.blazetv.com/jeffy Promo code jeffy… Cyber crimes / Ransomware / Sanctions… Global Citizen Live… Headlines / Body found / Headstone found / Laser Chicken / Gene for human tails / Dino Bidness… Tarantula Bidness… Car crash epidemic… Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
New figures from Google show a tenfold increase in the requests from law enforcement, which target anyone who happened to be in a given location at a specified time.
New figures from Google show a tenfold increase in the requests from law enforcement, which target anyone who happened to be in a given location at a specified time.
Ari Ezra Waldman, a professor of law and computer science at Northeastern University Law School, discusses the spike in police use of geofence warrants to get location records for all mobile devices within a virtual perimeter. His new book is, "Industry Unbound: The Inside Story of Privacy, Data and Corporate Power." June Grasso hosts. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Ari Ezra Waldman, a professor of law and computer science at Northeastern University Law School, discusses the spike in police use of geofence warrants to get location records for all mobile devices within a virtual perimeter. His new book is, "Industry Unbound: The Inside Story of Privacy, Data and Corporate Power." June Grasso hosts. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
In an age where Technology rules the day it is easy for the government to collect data en masse. In todays episode we dive into that issue and discuss the use of Geofence Warrants and how they are unconstitutional. To contact me:bobbycapucci@protonmail.comSource:https://www.yahoo.com/news/google-says-geofence-warrants-one-215401933.html
Nella linkografia su caffe20.it approfondite il tema della geolocalizzazione che wired solleva: https://www-wired-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.wired.com/story/geofence-warrants-google/amp
In this episode, host Bidemi Ologunde revisited a dramatic 2018 wrongful arrest case in Arizona to explain what geofence warrants are, and how their increasingly widespread use is threatening privacy nationwide.Please send questions, comments, and suggestions to bidemi@thebidpicture.com. You can also get in touch on LinkedIn, Twitter, the Clubhouse app (@bid), and the Wisdom app (@bidemi).
Xin chào, tụi mình là just Bangtan's tune! Số podcast hôm nay nói về việc BTS được nhắc đến trong một tiểu luận review nghiên cứu sửa đổi "geofence warrants" về sự bất bình đẳng xã hội của đại học luật Harvard và nội dung như thế nào thì mời mọi người lắng nghe nha! Còn chần chừ gì nữa nào, tụi mình cùng bắt đầu thôi! Ghé nhà tụi mình tại đây nha: https://www.facebook.com/justbangtanvn --- P/s: Geofence warrants (còn được gọi là trát hàng rào địa lý) là lệnh khám xét do tòa án ban hành để cho phép cơ quan thực thi pháp luật tìm kiếm cơ sở dữ liệu để tìm tất cả các thiết bị di động đang hoạt động trong một khu vực hàng rào địa lý cụ thể phục vụ cho việc điều tra và bắt giữ tội phạm.
This episode contains the following: Report: Minneapolis police used Geofence warrant during unrest following killing of George Floyd 4 LA state police troopers charged in excessive force cases Seattle police release officer body cam, surveillance video, 911 calls which led to officer shooting Opening car door invalidates stop and leads to suppression Colorado police officers tied to Elijah McClain photos lose appeals to rejoin department Woman in pink bikini leads southern California cops on slow speed pursuit Caught on video, customer fatally shoots car thief at Florida car wash. He won't be charged. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/leoroundtable/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/leoroundtable/support
Police increasingly ask Google and other tech firms for data about who was where, when. Two judges ruled the investigative tool invalid in a Chicago case.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We fact check 3.5inch floppy sizes. Nvidia buying ARM for $40B. App Store Review Guideline updates now available. Apple Insider Confirms New iPhone 12, iPhone 12 Pro Releases. Apple Is About To Leave Your MacBook Air Behind. The State of SwiftUI. We cover the 9/15 Apple Event. Apple developers are scrambling over accelerated iOS 14 release. Picks: iOS 14 widgets you can try today.Core Data in SwiftUI.
Welcome! Craig discusses geofence warrants and why they are so popular with law enforcement investigators. Has the court seen enough? Listen in to find out. For more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Read More: iOS 13.7 launched today with a new system for battling the pandemic Hackers are exploiting a critical flaw affecting >350,000 WordPress sites The accidental notary: Apple approves notorious malware to run on Macs Most IoT Hardware Dangerously Easy to Crack 55% of Cybersquatted Domains are Malicious or Potentially Fraudulent Feds Can’t Ask Google for Every Phone in a 100-meter Radius, Court Says The Hidden Cost of Losing Security Talent Don’t forget Cybersecurity on Your Back-to-School List --- Automated Machine-Generated Transcript: Craig Peterson: [00:00:00] Welcome back everybody. The fed had been out there using stingrays and other devices to watch where you're at. We're going to talk about that right now, and a new core ruling against the feds for some of the stuff they've been doing to spy. We're not just talking about spying on the bad guys. This isn't a FISA court thing. This is in fact, the feds taking the lazy way out. So think about you. If you were a police officer trying to investigate a crime, what's the easiest way for you to figure out who was in the area when a bank was robbed? Okay. I'm going to give you one second. What's the easiest way. it turns out that apparently the easiest way is to just send a letter to Google asking them for information about every phone within a 100-meter radius of where a suspected crime occurred. Now, isn't that an interesting thing, right? Isn't that an interesting way to do it? You might say, I've got an iPhone I don't have Google. So they're not going to be able to give that information to the fed. Do you have any Google apps on your phone that might be keeping track of your location? Things like, oh, I don't know. Google maps for instance. That could be a bit of a problem because federal courts in the Chicago area have now rejected government warrant applications three times. The government has applied for a warrant to force Google to produce a list of smartphones that were near a couple of places where the feds thought that crimes might have occurred, during the specified 45-minute intervals. Now, this recent ruling was handed down just last week and was recently made public and ARS Technica is talking about this. Now the numbers are frankly, striking here because these decisions really haven't significant impact. Google has reported. The growth in the law enforcement use of what are being called geo-fence searches. Are you familiar with geofencing? On your Android or your iPhone you can say, Hey, I'm on my to-do list here. I got a pickup toilet paper when I get near the grocery store because we all know there's no toilet paper in grocery stores. So when you drive by the grocery store, you can have a little, geofence set up on your phone that says, Hey, remember you got to get toilet paper. Then you can run to the grocery store, pick up your toilet paper, and be on your way. Geo-fencing when we're talking about these types of searches means a little bit different, but almost the same. That is Google gets or Apple gets a demand from the police, a warrant, that says, tell me about every phone that was within again, a hundred meters, 300 feet of this business of this area during this 45 minute period. Now, what we're seeing here is a 1500% increase in these types of warrants between 2017 and 2018. And then it jumped up again. Another 600%. percentages don't mean much unless you have the raw numbers. Let me give you the raw numbers. Google says that they received 180 geofence search requests a week. During 2019, that kinda adds up. At least I think it adds up. So let me see 180 a week. And let's just say there are 52 weeks in a year. Oh my gosh. That's almost 10,000 of these warrants that Google has to respond to every day. And if we say 180 a week and we divided by, Oh, I don't know. let's say the police work seven days a week. That means 25 warrants per day, almost 26 warrants per day. So that's a couple of full-time people just to respond to these. Of course, it also has to go over to the legal side and everything else. It gets to be a real problem. Google is a very popular target for these warns because almost everyone uses Google products in one way or another. Think of our cars, how many of our cars have Android in them? How many of them are using Google maps? How many of our cars have GPS on them? All of that is being tracked by Google. Yes, indeed. Android controls a majority of the smartphone market right now. As I mentioned earlier, even those of us who have I-phones might be using Gmail or Google maps. So this is going to be an ongoing problem. I think it needs to be solved at a bit of a higher level than just district courts in various States out there. now for years, the. Police have gone after the cell phone companies to ask where a phone was that the whole idea of a tower location. What will happen is, am I trying to triangulate you more frequently? However, all of the phone companies will have is just data that you were connected to this cell tower, which means you, it was probably the closest cell tower to you because that's the idea, right? You'll hop between the South towers, depending on which one is the strongest. This is a kind of a Dragnet approach. Something I do not approve of and many courts don't approve of just because it makes it easier for the police doesn't mean it's constitutional. In one case last year, Google was required to hand over information on almost 1500 users to federal investigators, working on a Wisconsin arson case. We've also seen. Cases where a guy was running his bicycle back and forth on this back street. Not like he was right in front of one house, but he got nailed because he was on that street at the wrong time. Although ultimately they figured out he had nothing to do with the crime, so they just turned his life upside down. So we'll see what happens. This Chicago case apparently is being, appealed, and if the appeal goes through, it could place new limits on these broad government data requests, which I think is ultimately a pretty good deal. By the way, what were they investigating? it turns out they're investigating a case where there were stolen pharmaceuticals, apparently sold on the black market and investigators believe that the bad guys stole the pharmaceuticals from this drug store or a clinic, and then traveled to another one to ship them to customers like a FedEx or ups stores. So to help them investigate, the suspect, the investigators asked Google for data about every smartphone that was near either this drug store or the medical clinic or FedEx or ups during a particular 45-minute window, one window, the first location, two windows on different days of the second. So the application was rejected. It was said to be too broad. The government narrowed its request too much narrower areas right around the buildings, but the courts rejected them all. The court said none of them complied with the Fourth Amendment's requirement that warrant particularly described the persons or things to be seized. Interesting. Very interesting. I know. What do you think about this? these all persons warrants are generally considered to be unconstitutional that's part of the reason we have the fourth amendment because the King was issuing these very vague big in the general warrant, the gave his military officers, governors and others, the ability to just go in and harass anybody they basically wanted to. So I tend to agree with the courts on this one. Sometimes, I disagree sometimes I agree, but then, in order to really justify this kind of a geo-fence search the government, according to this judge needs to show that everyone in the geofenced areas likely to be involved in the crime. So how does this work when we're talking about these domestic terrorists that are burning down, buildings, cars dragging people from cars, beating them. Are we going to see these types of cases, as well as the geofence? Ultimately we will see. But again, it's another reason. Not only do the bad guys have apps that are attracting you. And I talk about those a lot, but the good guys are too. And. They might just upturn your life for what turns out to be not particularly good reason and something that's probably against the fourth amendment. Alright. When we come back, we're going to talk about a business problem right now, and that has to do with it. Security person, now there's a huge shortage, but what's the cost. When you lose the security person, you're listening to Craig Peterson, WGAN. Stick around. Cause we'll be right back. --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553
Facebook formally codifies policy on third-party vulnerabilities. Apple delays changes to device ID collection. Geofence warrants strike out in federal court. Thanks to our sponsor, Trusona. Trusona enables enterprises to provide enhanced security and usability to the workforce by removing passwords from the Windows 10 login experience. The solution works with your existing infrastructure without requiring any software or hardware upgrades like Windows Hello, cameras, biometric readers or on-premises servers — making it the most cost-effective and user-friendly to deploy. For more, head to CISOSeries.com
This week on Surveillance And The City, we talk about Mayor Bill de Blasio’s controversial COVID-19 checkpoints, the NYPD’s arrest of activist Nikki Stone, and the scary world of geofence warrants which give cops a blank check to track nearly anyone at any time. To round things out we look back at the Graphic Novel turned generation defining movie, V for Vendetta, and talk about how eerily similar our dystopia is.
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We fact check on Geofence tools and warrants and how to avoid tracking. We have a Friends of the Show channel on our Slack. Tim's poll results on the next name of macOS are revealed. Jaime recants his WWDC Sob Story. Apple offers interest-free financing on more of its products. What Will macOS 10.16 Be Called: Mammoth, Monterey, Skyline, or Something New? Magic Keyboard for iPad Pro Review: 2 Months Later. Apple, ARM, and Intel. Paul Hudson's WWDC Community: Learning and sharing together. iOS 14: What to expect. Apple updates Developer app to add Mac support ahead of online-only WWDC. Picks: Heroes and Juniors: Increasing Engineering Team Velocity
Welcome to Episode 5 of the Brutal South Podcast. My guest this week is Dr. James N. Gilmore, assistant professor of media and technology studies at Clemson University.I met Jimmy at the University of South Carolina in the freshman Honors College dorm, which was an old building full of lovable weirdos. He had a film criticism blog going at the time that I really loved, and when I became an editor at the Daily Gamecock student newspaper, I convinced him to start writing reviews for us. I considered it a coup.Jimmy went to grad school, then he went to more grad school, and he became an expert in subjects like wearable technology, digital infrastructure, and Southern cultural studies. Every few months now, it seems like, he announces the title of a new paper he's just published, and each one is a certified club banger.I invited him onto the podcast to talk about wearable tracking devices, parenting, protest, and policing, all of which have surprising common threads. As a bonus, he sent me a recent article he had published about a Google data center that was built right in my backyard, and we talked about that too.You can follow Dr. Gilmore on Twitter at @JamesNGilmore or visit his website at JamesNGilmore.com. One book he recommended during the podcast is The Charisma Machine: The Life, Death, and Legacy of One Laptop Per Child by Morgan G. Ames, which you can find at your local bookstore or via the Brutal South Bookshop page.Here are the articles and papers we discussed in this episode:Sen, Ari. “UNC Campus Police Used Geofencing Tech to Monitor Antiracism Protestors.” NBCNews.com, NBCUniversal News Group, 21 Dec. 2019, www.nbcnews.com/news/education/unc-campus-police-used-geofencing-tech-monitor-antiracism-protestors-n1105746.Gilmore, J. N. (2019). Securing the kids: Geofencing and child wearables. Convergence. https://doi.org/10.1177/1354856519882317Gilmore, J. N., & Troutman, B. (2020). Articulating infrastructure to water: Agri-culture and Google’s South Carolina data center. International Journal of Cultural Studies. https://doi.org/10.1177/1367877920913044The image at the top of the page is Colonial Policy by Pavel Filonov, c. 1926. This is a public episode. Get access to private episodes at brutalsouth.substack.com/subscribe
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
We fact check on Spotlight. We discuss some of the challenges of working with files on iPadOS vs the Mac. Apple Card will let clients buy Apple hardware with interest free payments. IBM will no longer offer, develop, or research facial recognition technology. Amazon bans police from using its facial recognition technology for the next year. Here’s What You Need to Know about Battery Health Management in Catalina. Geofence warrants: How police can use protesters' phones against them. New Resources Available for Password Manager Apps. Which UI design tool should I use in 2020? Apple plans to announce ARM transition for all Macs at WWDC 2020. New iMac With 'iPad Pro Design Language'. Picks: Excalidraw | Hand-drawn look & feel.
In episode 98 of our monthly show co-host Scott Wright shows us a demo of Click Armor which is a gamified cybersecurity awareness platform, Tom presents the results of our listener survey, and we have a discussion about the privacy concerns with geofence warrants. ** Show notes and links mentioned on the show ** Take […] The post Click Armor Demo, Podcast Survey Results, Google Geofence Warrants appeared first on The Shared Security Show.
Today Google data and geofence warrants https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/google-tracked-his-bike-ride-past-burglarized-home-made-him-n1151761 2009 making a comeback https://www.zdnet.com/article/how-poor-iot-security-is-allowing-this-ten-year-old-malware-to-make-a-comeback/#ftag=CAD-03-10abf5f AND The Nearly Daily COVID-19 update
About this Episode: In this episode, we had the honor of speaking with Brett Velicovich, the Strategic Advisor for WhiteFox Defense Technologies at CES 2020. Brett gives us the rundown on the need for drone safety and security measures. WhiteFox invented the counter-drone solution and develops products to securely manage drones in airspaces worldwide. Listen in as we learn more about what counter-drone is and why Brett says that without it we cannot realize the full potential of drone technology. More and more drones are used every day, by hobbyists, the military, and companies such as Amazon, Google, and UPS for deliveries. How can we ensure that they seamlessly and safely blend into our lives? About Brett Velicovich: Brett Velicovich is a U.S. Army Veteran, National Security Analyst, Author, and Business Executive. Brett served as an intelligence analyst (MOS 35F) for the U.S. Army, in both Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) and Operation Enduring Freedom(OEF). After he received an MBA from Duke University and focused his post-Army career on the commercial drone technology sector. He is the Strategic Advisor for WhiteFox Defense Technologies. Twitter: @TheDroneWarrior LinkedIn: Brett Velicovich Notes: 0:15 CES 2020, Brett Velicovich WhiteFox Defense Technologies. 1:39 Drone expert, military and private sector. 1:48 WhiteFox Defense and drone security, dangers, maintenance, safety as a society. 2:55 What is White Fox Defense? 3:30 Virtual Geofence, systems that counter threats from drones. 4:14 What are the capabilities and ranges for a Geofence? 4:59 Larger range for big facilities and FAA regulations. 5:56 How drone technology has evolved. 6:40 Drones in the public and commercial sectors. 7:00 Drones evolving, stabilizers and WiFi capabilities. 7:46 Drones are not only about what you can see in photos but they are about gathering data. 8:00 Drones and how they are used has changed. 8:28 Counter-drone fields are having to evolve with drone technology. 8:48 What is jamming, or mitigating? 9:09 Counter-droning is security. 10:21 Remote ID, the digital license. 11:17 WISDM, WhiteFox’s remote ID system also addresses personal security. 11:48 Precision in the WISDM system. 12:23 Safety system in drones to return them home. 13:12 Many home-built drones are not up to regulation. 13:42 Is drone tech regulated? Regulations are not keeping pace with new technology. 15:21 Different regulations between the private and public sectors. 15:58 Regulations hindering mitigation. 17:01 Drones: from flying over stadiums to regulations, and nuances. 17:40 The dangers of not having regulations in place to mitigate. 18:20 Study of drones in LA airspace over six months showed surprising results. 19:19 Careless users are a concern. 20:40 What is WhiteFox showcasing at CES? 20:49 WhiteFox is the first counter-drone company at CES. 21:20 Scorpion 2, handheld devices detecting drones. 22:00 Waiting on FAA to approve the Remote ID system. 22:57 What are the security measures and mechanisms in drones today in general? 23:25 FAA Regulations and education for the consumer. 25:00 Strategic Advisor for WhiteFox. 26:29 Drone technology benefits from cell technology. 26:39 How long drones can be in the air, refueling in air,
S/o to this week’s guests Mini & Max. The 4th Amendment vs Geofence warrants. Chill wil has the opposite of fast food news this week. The monopolized telecommunications industry. Intro : Kanye West feat Pusha T ~ Runaway --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/DopeInfoPod/message
Aramco’s Repairs Could Take Months Longer Than Company Anticipates, Contractors Sayhttps://www.wsj.com/articles/aramcos-repairs-could-take-months-longer-than-company-anticipates-contractors-say-11569180194?- difference between supply, production, output and capacity- hard to parse out what is relevant and what the narrative that’s being painted- how exactly Oil steadies on hopes of full Saudi output restarthttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-oil/oil-edges-further-above-64-on-doubts-over-saudi-supply-idUSKBN1W8037- Won’t see full impact of lost barrels until mid-Oct because of how exports work- Will we see a big draw in a month and traders will trade up?- Some argue the market isn’t taking this seriously enough, but the market doesn’t have a motive and if the market doesn’t think the threat to Saudi oil is serious, then it’s not.Saudi Arabia tells Japan's biggest refiner about possible shipment change: Nikkeihttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-aramco-oil-japan/saudi-arabia-tells-japans-biggest-refiner-about-possible-shipment-change-nikkei-iduskbn1w7020Mitsubishi says Singapore-based oil trader lost $320 million in unauthorized tradeshttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-mitsubishi-crude-trading-results/mitsubishi-says-singapore-based-oil-trader-lost-320-million-in-unauthorized-trades-idUSKBN1W510H- trader has been missing since August- what were his trades? How did he manage to lose so much money?- How does the market feel about this?- But it may not even impact PDS earnings because the company made $5 billion between January and MarchInterview with Devin Geoghegan Global Director of Petroleum Intelligence from Genscape- Tell us about Genscape and what you guys do.Worlds largest private network of infield monitors. Power, oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, maritime data.- The oil market is currently obsessed with whether Saudi Aramco is capable of meeting its ambitious repair targets for the damage incurred at Abqaiq and Khurais. What light can you shed on what you see happening on the ground in Saudi Arabia in terms of production?Detected fields producing no less than about 50% of original capacity right after attacks happened. Wednesday/Thursday about 60% returned and along the week seen a couple offshore fields begin to ramp up production through detected signals. So far what Aramco has reported, they have corroborated what Aramco has said is happened.Use satellites to tell how much heat is coming off an oil field and historical production to create oil flaring ratio. Draw a GPS fence around a field and measure how much heat vs. oil.Of the 5.7 million bpd from impacted areas (Abqaiq, Khurais, Shaybah) 65% already flowingGood portion of remaining capacity at offshore fields beginning to ramp upDifferent grade, offshore oil is heavier. Misunderstanding about which fields are connected to Abqaiq and which weren’t. Khurais not constrained by Abqaiq - processed on siteShaybah misunderstandings - that field is less constrained by Abqaiq than more suspected. No difference in production detected. Diagrams indicate that Shaybah goes through Abqaiq but crude there is partially stabilized in Shaybah before going to Abqaiq. Aramco built massive NGL facility at Shaybah so they are processing it there and no need for that oil to go through the spheroids at Abqaiq. Goes straight to desulfurization towers. Shaybah oil is naturally really low in sulfur. Believe it’s being taken to Abqaiq and blended with other oil from Beri.- Any impact of explosion on satellite readings? Definitely didn’t build algorithm for missile attacks but shift to a manual mode and take over from algorithm. Look at points of light and temperature manually and then account for other heat. Takes a little longer.Flaring data going back to 2012. Gathering field data for 5+ years. Even when people say field data is unavailable you can find information in Arabic/Farsi other languages. Most detections come from field detection itself. Occasionally look at refineries but usually look at GOSPs and flaring.Geofence each field based on flare stacks.Data is provided every day.- How could or should traders put this type of information and data to work for them?Most use cases for data outside of missile attacks are blended with other information, can see if countries are producing more or less than they claim.In events like this or during Venezuela power outages, data can cut through noise or bias from sources.- Where can listeners find you and your business?Website https://www.genscape.com/ and twitter @globaloilSD
Aramco’s Repairs Could Take Months Longer Than Company Anticipates, Contractors Sayhttps://www.wsj.com/articles/aramcos-repairs-could-take-months-longer-than-company-anticipates-contractors-say-11569180194?- difference between supply, production, output and capacity- hard to parse out what is relevant and what the narrative that’s being painted- how exactly Oil steadies on hopes of full Saudi output restarthttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-global-oil/oil-edges-further-above-64-on-doubts-over-saudi-supply-idUSKBN1W8037- Won’t see full impact of lost barrels until mid-Oct because of how exports work- Will we see a big draw in a month and traders will trade up?- Some argue the market isn’t taking this seriously enough, but the market doesn’t have a motive and if the market doesn’t think the threat to Saudi oil is serious, then it’s not.Saudi Arabia tells Japan's biggest refiner about possible shipment change: Nikkeihttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-saudi-aramco-oil-japan/saudi-arabia-tells-japans-biggest-refiner-about-possible-shipment-change-nikkei-iduskbn1w7020Mitsubishi says Singapore-based oil trader lost $320 million in unauthorized tradeshttps://www.reuters.com/article/us-mitsubishi-crude-trading-results/mitsubishi-says-singapore-based-oil-trader-lost-320-million-in-unauthorized-trades-idUSKBN1W510H- trader has been missing since August- what were his trades? How did he manage to lose so much money?- How does the market feel about this?- But it may not even impact PDS earnings because the company made $5 billion between January and MarchInterview with Devin Geoghegan Global Director of Petroleum Intelligence from Genscape- Tell us about Genscape and what you guys do.Worlds largest private network of infield monitors. Power, oil, natural gas, natural gas liquids, maritime data.- The oil market is currently obsessed with whether Saudi Aramco is capable of meeting its ambitious repair targets for the damage incurred at Abqaiq and Khurais. What light can you shed on what you see happening on the ground in Saudi Arabia in terms of production?Detected fields producing no less than about 50% of original capacity right after attacks happened. Wednesday/Thursday about 60% returned and along the week seen a couple offshore fields begin to ramp up production through detected signals. So far what Aramco has reported, they have corroborated what Aramco has said is happened.Use satellites to tell how much heat is coming off an oil field and historical production to create oil flaring ratio. Draw a GPS fence around a field and measure how much heat vs. oil.Of the 5.7 million bpd from impacted areas (Abqaiq, Khurais, Shaybah) 65% already flowingGood portion of remaining capacity at offshore fields beginning to ramp upDifferent grade, offshore oil is heavier. Misunderstanding about which fields are connected to Abqaiq and which weren’t. Khurais not constrained by Abqaiq - processed on siteShaybah misunderstandings - that field is less constrained by Abqaiq than more suspected. No difference in production detected. Diagrams indicate that Shaybah goes through Abqaiq but crude there is partially stabilized in Shaybah before going to Abqaiq. Aramco built massive NGL facility at Shaybah so they are processing it there and no need for that oil to go through the spheroids at Abqaiq. Goes straight to desulfurization towers. Shaybah oil is naturally really low in sulfur. Believe it’s being taken to Abqaiq and blended with other oil from Beri.- Any impact of explosion on satellite readings? Definitely didn’t build algorithm for missile attacks but shift to a manual mode and take over from algorithm. Look at points of light and temperature manually and then account for other heat. Takes a little longer.Flaring data going back to 2012. Gathering field data for 5+ years. Even when people say field data is unavailable you can find information in Arabic/Farsi other languages. Most detections come from field detection itself. Occasionally look at refineries but usually look at GOSPs and flaring.Geofence each field based on flare stacks.Data is provided every day.- How could or should traders put this type of information and data to work for them?Most use cases for data outside of missile attacks are blended with other information, can see if countries are producing more or less than they claim.In events like this or during Venezuela power outages, data can cut through noise or bias from sources.- Where can listeners find you and your business?Website https://www.genscape.com/ and twitter @globaloilSD
What’s up everybody? We had an amazing event, the Nashville Voice Conference, on July 31, 2019, and we are already making preparations for Nashville Voice Conference 2020. One of the things we wanted to do with our event, was create a Snapchat GeoFilter around the location of the event, which was held at Thistle Farms in Nashville, TN. I had one of my teammates, Tanner Boriack, help me prepare this Data Driven Daily Tip. Here is how to create a Snapchat filter. 1. Go to Shapchat.com 2. Click on Create. 3. You’ll see a few different options. Community Filters, Filters and Lenses. Select “Filters.” 4. Then click “Create Now” next to Filters. 5. You’ll see a couple different options. You can use Snapchat’s own pre-loaded options/designs, or you can design your own filter with creative tools like Photoshop, Illustrator, or even my own personal favorite – Canva! 6. Take note of the size of the file. Make sure it’s 1080 px wide by 2340 px tall. 7. Make sure you have a transparent background as part of your image, where the users would be shown in their photo, in the upper two-thirds portion of your design. 8. Also make sure you have a contrasting background with your text color in the lower third portion of your design. 9. Upload a png file of your design by clicking the “Upload” yellow button. Preview your design. 10. Click the yellow “next” button to select the day and time of when you want your filter to show (we set ours for a couple hours before the event, to a couple hours after the event). 11. Click next again. 12. Select the GeoLocation of your event. Start by typing in the address or name of the business location at which your event will occur. 13. Create your GeoFence by following the instructions within Snapchat (minimum size, click and drag). 14. Checkout – enter payment information, check settings and click Submit! Boom, your Event will now have a really cool Snapchat Geo-Filter! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/paulhickey/support
This week, we discuss Washington Post's new contextual beast - Zeus. Is IGTV the new YouTube? Some YouTubers are using IGTV as a testbed. Despite all rumors, Netflix will remain "Ad-Free". Were you part of the 80 million users of the FaceApp? Not us, we did not fall into the Russian trap. COPPA might be getting another review by the FTC, stay tuned as this law affects programmatic ninjas every day. Later on, Frost Prioleau joins us in the Sensei’s Corner to discuss research results from a MarketingLand article on Location-based targeting and give us his point of view on GDPR and CPPA. Frost Prioleau is the Co-Founder and CEO of Simpli.fi. An experienced online advertising executive specializing in targeting, optimization, and technology, Prioleau focuses on corporate strategy, driving Simpli.fi’s growth, and ensuring customer satisfaction. Considered to be a thought leader in online advertising, Prioleau often speaks on the topic at industry trade shows. In addition, he shares his opinions and insights about retargeting in his monthly column published on Search Engine Land. Prioleau is a graduate of Princeton University, where he earned a Bachelor’s of Science in Engineering Management Systems. Connect with: Frost Prioleau: Linkedin | Twitter | Simpli.fi Programmatic Digest Podcast: Contact | Website | Shownote Helene Parker: Website | LinkedIn | Twitter
I am very pumped to share with you all the story of Hirbod Bigvand, CEO at Surfboard. He came to the U.S. with $300 in his pocket from Iran at the age of 16. He hustled his way through high school and college learning about entrepreneurship and developing two mobile applications. They became valuable learning experiences and over time, he launched the third app. Today, he and his staff are helping its users to capture their adventures freely within their respective communities utilizing geofence feature. Connect with Hirbod HERE.
Many clubs use mobile apps to get better engagement from their members and customers, to increase sales and event attendance, and to drive revenue.In this episode, Roger shares three ways you can set up a geofence at your club to automatically promote club to every app user.
today just thinking about marketing and selling and all the crazy stuff they come up with and how to get peoples attention I love it, it’s so fun and intriguing that I though I’d share a little bit about it on my way in. #crushlife --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/joelpilka/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/joelpilka/support
Rob Andreski is the VP of Sales, Midwest for Enradius. Enradius is a local programmatic digital advertising platform that is bringing the value of programmatic display, mobile, video, and social to small and mid-sized businesses, non-profits, agencies and publishers. Rob is a digital media and technology sales veteran with over 18 years experience working with advertisers, agencies, and publishers. His key areas of expertise are digital advertising including display, programmatic, mobile, and video. He started his career in digital media with the company that later became Monster.com. Rob talks about the rise of programmatic advertising, other trends in digital marketing and the power of geofence advertising. Free Video: How to Create a Repeatable Process for Generating High-Quality Leads and Predictably Book Your Calendar With Interested Prospects on Autopilot Without Cold Calling or Ads: https://outboundleadaccelerator.com/ Case Study: How to Use Automated Cold Email Marketing to Spend $166.70 and Make $3,435.30 in Profit (2,061% ROI) – Email Templates Included: http://morgandwilliams.com/case-study Join the Facebook Group (B2B SaaS Cold Outreach Mastery): http://morgandwilliams.com/fbgroup Link to the show notes: https://morgandwilliams.com/generating-better-and-more-leads-from-events-with-geofence-advertising-from-a-veteran-of-aol-monster-com-and-ad-com-w-rob-andreski/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/morgan-williams0/message
In this episode I had Mario Onelas CEO of Zonetap join us! Zonetap is a new software that allows businesses to create Geofence ads. For example a Cafe could create a promo message that says “Come inside for a free cup of coffee”, this cafe could send this promo to any of its customers that walk in, walk by or are in the surrounding area of that cafe! I’m excited to announce we’re adding Zonetap to Chad (Learn more about Chad here: www.ContactChad.com) you will be able to create Geofence Ads for your chatrooms
A new tracking and avoidance system, drones that assist firefighters, a Phantom firmware rollback, drone waiters that bring your meal, a personal No Fly Zone, shooting down those pesky drones, Qualcomm buys KMel Robotics, and California seeks to regulate drones below 400 feet. News PrecisionHawk Announces UAV Tracking and Avoidance System PrecisionHawk released an automated traffic control system for UAVs said to aid with the integration of UAVs into the National Airspace (NAS). The “Low Altitude Tracking and Avoidance System” (LATAS) uses global cellular networks on speeds as low as 2G. to provide real-time flight planning, tracking and avoidance for UAVs. LATAS is small (3x2x1in) and light and was developed to be plug and play or integrated into a UAV's circuit during manufacturing. Micro-flyer drone could help a robot to fight fires on ships Last November, the US Office of Naval Research conducted a demonstration of its Shipboard Autonomous Firefighting Robot (SAFFiR) along with an autonomous quadcopter drone. The robot/drone combination is intended to assist firefighters aboard naval vessels. This is under the Office of Naval Research's Damage Control Technologies for the 21st Century (DC-21) project. The quadcopter comes from Carnegie Mellon University's Robotics Institute and Sensible Machines. This Spherical Rescue Drone Is Straight Out of Star Wars Flyability has introduced what it calls “the world's first collision-proof drone.” The “Gimball” search and rescue drone is spherical and bounces off obstacles to keep flying. It has a coaxial twin rotor design inside a rotating protective carbon fiber frame. In Crash-proof UAV takes out US$1 million Drones For Good Competition we learn that the Flyability Gimball took first place in the Drones For Good contest. Unexpected issues force drone maker DJI to roll back 'White House' update DJI has rolled back the geofencing firmware update for the Phantom — also known as the "White House patch" — because there have been reports of "unanticipated flight behavior." Drone waiters to serve patrons in Singapore restaurants Infinium Robotics specializes “in providing autonomous UAV solutions for commercial applications.” That includes food delivery by drone in some Singapore restaurants. The rotors are completely enclosed to avoid injury and the UAVs utilize sense and avoid technology. Singapore currently has a shortage of workers in the food industry so this is covering a real need. NoFlyZone Lets You Establish A No-Fly Zone Over Your Property NoFlyZone creates a GeoFence around your home after you register your property. Currently, the service works with UAS manufacturers DroneDeploy, YUNEEC, HEXO+, PixiePath, RCFlyMaps. EHANG, and Horizon Hobby. Oklahoma bill would allow property owners to shoot down drones without civil liability The Oklahoma State Senate Judiciary Committee passed Senate Bill 492, giving property owners the right to shoot down drones without fear of civil liability. Backers say that drones are increasingly being used by cattle thieves. This bill would protect property owners should they be sued by thieves over a shot down drone. Qualcomm Buys Aerial Drone Startup with Advanced Control Technology Chipmaker Qualcomm has acquired startup KMel Robotics, which specializes in multi-rotor drones. Qualcomm isn't providing any details other than to point to the KMel Robotics website: “We are extremely excited to become part of the Qualcomm team and look forward to bringing aerial robotics to the next level together.” KMel Robotics has produced videos demonstrating impressive flight coordination: Flying Robot Dance unveiled at CES 2014. Flying Robot Rockstars where hexacopters create music. Amazing in Motion demonstrates swarming quadcopters. California's No Drone Zones California bill SB142 bans trespassing by drones flying below 400 feet. Mentioned UOIT Controls The Weather At Its Drone Testing Centre
We open with an on-going discussion of location services, specifically the limitations of geofencing on iOS devices and some clever workarounds. Eventually, we evolve into a conversation about the genetics of a startup company and the parallels between agile product development and genetic evolution. This one's a little out there, and for us, that's saying something.
In this episode, Aubrey and Justin discuss geo-fencing - the use of location services to detect region boundary crossing events - to prompt user action. When this type of prompt is used effectively, it provides a subtle guide to help the user achieve a task they want/need to do without being intrusive. When abused, it leaves the user feeling annoyed and disappointed. Just as we form impressions of our machines, they cultivate an understanding of us during the conversation. Voice control illustrates this effect elegantly with its uncanny ability to understand our intent, despite our imperfect expression.