The Asian Age

Fitness apps reveal Army bases, location of soldiers

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Washington, Jan. 29: Security concerns have been raised after a fitness-tracking firm showed, on fitness devices such as Fitbit and Jawbone, the exercise routes of personnel in military bases around the world.

San Francisco- based online fitness tracker Strava, which has 27 million users around the world, provides an app that uses a mobile phone’s GPS to track a subscriber’s exercise activity. It collects this data and publishes what it calls “Global Heatmaps”, showing the paths its users log as they run or cycle, enabling people to check their own performanc­es and compare them with others.

The “global heatmaps” show, in aggregate form, every public activity uploaded to the app over its history. In major cities, it lights up popular running routes, but in less trafficked locales it highlights areas with an unusually high concentrat­ion of connected, exercise-focused individual­s — such .

Nathan Ruser, a member of the Institute for United Conflict Analysts, that it’s easy to look at the map and cross- reference it with the locations of known military installati­ons, or pick out potential installati­ons in combat zones based on the data from users using the app. He posted several screenshot­s that he theorized were , and locations of .

Following the revelation, militaries around the world are contemplat­ing bans on fitness trackers to prevent future breaches.

As well as the location of military bases, the

identities of individual service members can also be uncovered, if they are using the service with the default privacy settings.

Strava has defended its publicatio­n of heatmaps that accidental­ly reveal sensitive military positions, arguing that the informatio­n was already made public by the users who uploaded it.

In a statement, Strava said: “Our global heatmap represents an aggregated and anonymised view of over a billion activities uploaded to our platform. It excludes activities that have been marked as private and userdefine­d privacy zones.”

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