
Uncovering Your Every Move: How Cell Phone Tracking Really Works
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このコンテンツについて
Episode Show Notes:
- Introduction to cell phone tracking and GPS tracking using cell phone data
- Explanation of cell phone antennas you see along highways and streets
- Description of typical cell tower antenna design — triangular mounts with multiple antenna arrays facing different directions
- Each antenna array often belongs to a different mobile provider (e.g., T-Mobile, Verizon, Sprint)
- Importance of recognizing antenna sectors to help locate a device geographically
- Overview of how cell towers connect with multiple devices in their coverage area, even when phones are not in active use
- How cell networks “ping” phones regularly to know their location and route incoming calls properly
- Using cell tower data to identify not only which tower a device is connected to but also which specific antenna sector (direction) it is in
- Understanding that knowing the sector narrows down the phone’s location to a smaller area on a map
- Explaining how distance from the tower is calculated using the time delay of radio wave signals traveling between tower and phone
- Combining sector direction and distance from tower creates a rough location line where the phone could be
- Using speed data from the device’s movement to further narrow down possible locations by matching known roads and speed limits
- Example: If a device maintains 400 meters distance from the tower and travels at 70 mph, it likely follows a highway segment, not smaller streets
- How law enforcement uses this combined data to track suspects or verify alibis by analyzing cell tower “dumps” during specific times
- Eliminating innocent devices regularly present in an area (e.g., employees) to identify unusual or suspicious activity
- Application in various cases: crime investigations, fraud, divorce cases, money laundering, and asset concealment
- Using location data to confirm or refute claims about whereabouts at specific times
- How cell tower antennas can capture various data from connected phones beyond location: accelerometer, speed, altitude, barometric pressure, and sometimes message and call records
- Importance of understanding that any device within a sector’s coverage area can be identified and tracked
- Summary of how this technology can assist in solving crimes and providing evidence in court