The Reporter (Vacaville)

Some fear tech surveillan­ce of pregnancy

- By Maryclaire Dale

PHILADELPH­IA >> When Chandler Jones realized she was pregnant during her junior year of college, she turned to a trusted source for informatio­n and advice. Her cellphone.

“I couldn't imagine before the internet, trying to navigate this,” said Jones, 26, who graduated Tuesday from the University of Baltimore School of Law. “I didn't know if hospitals did abortions. I knew

Planned Parenthood did abortions, but there were none near me. So I kind of just Googled.”

But with each search, Jones was being surreptiti­ously followed — by the phone apps and browsers that track us as we click away, capturing even our most sensitive health data.

Online searches. Period apps. Fitness trackers. Advice helplines. GPS. The often obscure companies collecting our health history and geolocatio­n data may know more about us than we know ourselves.

For now, the informatio­n is mostly used to sell us things. But in a postRoe world — if the Supreme Court upends the 1973 decision that legalized abortion, as a draft opinion suggests it may in the coming weeks — the data would become more valuable, and women more vulnerable.

Privacy experts fear that pregnancie­s could be surveilled and the data shared with police or sold to vigilantes.

“The value of these tools for law enforcemen­t is for how they really get to peek into the soul,” said Cynthia Conti-Cook, a lawyer and technology fellow at the Ford Foundation. “It gives (them) the mental chatter inside our heads.”

And it's not just women who should be concerned. The same tactics used to surveil pregnancie­s can be used by life insurance companies to set premiums, banks to approve loans and employers to weigh hiring decisions, experts said.

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