By PETER MAASS and MEGHA RAJAGOPALAN
THE device in your purse or jeans that you think is a cellphone — guess
again. It is a tracking device that happens to make calls. Let’s stop
calling them phones. They are trackers.
Most doubts about the principal function of these devices were erased when it was recently disclosed
that cellphone carriers responded 1.3 million times last year to law
enforcement requests for call data. That’s not even a complete count,
because T-Mobile, one of the largest carriers, did not initially reveal
its total. It appears that millions of cellphone users have been swept
up in government surveillance of their calls and where they made them
from. Many police agencies don’t obtain search warrants when requesting location data from carriers.
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