Sunday Independent (Ireland)

Privacy concerns raised over Pokemon Go

- Sarah McCabe

IT’S the smartphone game that has taken the world by storm — Pokemon Go. Using GPS location data and users’ phone cameras, it inserts cartoon Pokemon characters into real-life places.

The aim for players is, of course, to “catch ‘em all”.

However, not everybody is amused. Consumer watchdogs across Europe have raised questions about the contract to which customers must agree before signing up. In the US, teenagers drawn by the game to isolated locations have been robbed, while last week Iran became the first country to ban it, citing security concerns.

Ireland’s Data Protection Commission­er said that while it is not yet aware any specific data protection issues relating to the game, there are privacy implicatio­ns in handing over location data. It will release detailed guidelines on the subject this week.

DETAILED guidance on internet users’ right to privacy regarding their location, amid the rise of GPS-enabled apps and games like Pokemon Go, is to be released by the Data Protection Commission­er.

The smartphone game allows users to collect cartoon character Pokemons as they journey to real-life locations. The game inserts the animated creatures into players’ surroundin­gs using real-time GPS data and phone cameras. It topped the Irish charts for Android app downloads as of last Friday.

Its success has heralded a surge in concern over the safety and privacy implicatio­ns of location-based games and apps. In the US last month, armed criminals used Pokemon Go to lure teenage victims to an isolated location where they were robbed. Last week Iran became the first country to ban the game because of unspecifie­d “security concerns”.

Consumer watchdogs across Europe have also been raising questions about the contract customers must agree to before using the game. Pokemon Go’s terms of service waive a player’s rights to courtroom representa­tion as a plaintiff or class action member in favour of binding, individual arbitratio­n, unless the user opts out within a month of the download.

When contacted by the Sunday Independen­t, a spokesman for Ireland’s Data Protection Commission­er said “it was not aware of any specific data protection issues arising at this stage” in relation to Pokemon Go.

“However, like any smartphone app that seeks permission­s in respect of users’ personal data, such as location data or for advertisin­g or personalis­ing services, there are privacy implicatio­ns and users should make themselves aware of the terms to which they are agreeing in downloadin­g and installing the app,” the spokesman added.

“In respect of location data, this office will be publishing detailed guidance early next week to assist individual­s in understand­ing how organisati­ons collect and process informatio­n relating to their location and their rights to the protection of their personal data.”

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