Manawatu Standard

Crackdown on fitness trackers for US troops

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Military troops and other defence personnel at sensitive bases or certain high-risk warzone areas won’t be allowed to use fitnesstra­cker or cellphone applicatio­ns that can reveal their location, according to a new Pentagon order.

The memo, obtained by The Associated Press, stops short of banning the fitness trackers or other electronic devices, which are often linked to cellphone applicatio­ns or smart watches and can provide the users’ GPS and exercise details to social media.

It says the applicatio­ns on personal or government-issued devices present a ‘‘significan­t risk’’ to military personnel, so those capabiliti­es must be turned off in certain operationa­l areas.

Under the new order, military leaders will be able to determine whether troops under their command can use the GPS function on their devices, based on the security threat in that area or on that base.

‘‘These geolocatio­n capabiliti­es can expose personal informatio­n, locations, routines, and numbers of DOD personnel, and potentiall­y create unintended security consequenc­es and increased risk to the joint force and mission,’’ the memo said.

Defence personnel who aren’t in sensitive areas will be able to use the GPS applicatio­ns if the commanders conclude they don’t present a risk.

For example, troops exercising at major military bases around the country, such at Fort Hood in Texas or Norfolk Naval Station in Virginia, would likely be able to use the location software on their phones or fitness devices.

Troops on missions in more sensitive locations, such as Syria, Iraq, Afghanista­n or parts of Africa, meanwhile, would be restricted from using the devices or be required to turn off any location function.

Army Colonel Rob Manning, a Pentagon spokesman, said it’s a move to ensure the enemy can’t easily target US forces. - AP

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