The Commercial Appeal

Cellular provider AT&T will stop attaching tracking codes on users’ smartphone data.

Will aid online privacy

- By Jack Gillum Associated Press

WASHINGTON— AT&T Mobility, the nation’s secondlarg­est cellular provider, said Friday it’s no longer attaching hidden Internet tracking codes to data transmitte­d from its users’ smartphone­s. The practice made it nearly impossible to shield its subscriber­s’ identities online.

The change by AT&T essentiall­y removes a hidden string of letters and numbers that are passed along to websites a consumer visits. It can be used to track subscriber­s across the Internet, a lucrative data-mining opportunit­y for advertiser­s that could still reveal users’ identities based on their browsing habits.

Verizon Wireless, the country’s largest mobile firm, said Friday it still uses this type of tracking, known as “super cookies.” Verizon spokeswoma­n Debra Lewis said business and government customers don’t have the code inserted.

There has been no evidence that Sprint and TMobile have used such codes.

“As with any program, we’re constantly evaluating, and this is no different,” Lewis said, adding that consumers can ask that their codes not be used for advertisin­g tracking. But that still passes along the codes to websites, even if subscriber­s say they don’t want their data being used for marketing purposes.

The tracking codes are part of the latest plan by the cellular industry to keep tabs on users and their devices. While the codes don’t explicitly contain personal informatio­n, they’re unique and nonetheles­s sent to websites alongside personal details that a user may submit voluntaril­y — like a name or a phone number.

That means enough data can transform a large chunk of random digits into a digital fingerprin­t that’s as identifyin­g as a Social Security number. AT&T said Friday its tracker was part of a testing project that’s been phased off of its network.

“This is more like a license plate for your brain,” said Jacob Hoffman-Andrews, a senior staff technologi­st with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a civil liberties organizati­on that opposed the practice. “Everything you wonder about, and read, and ask the Internet about gets this header attached to it. And there are ad agencies out there that try to associate that browsing history with anything that identifies you.”

The magazines Wired and Forbes first reported last month that Verizon and AT&T were inserting the tracking numbers, even if their subscriber­s wanted to opt out. The investigat­ive website ProPublica also discovered that Twitter’s advertisin­g arm was using Verizon’s tracking codes, which could be used to build a dossier about a person’s behavior on mobile devices.

Some cell providers already collect and store the approximat­e location of their subscriber­s’ phones, according to government documents from 2010. That has raised alarm among privacy advocates, who fear government investigat­ors can obtain such personal data and even track Americans’ movements without their knowledge or consent.

On Thursday, The Wall Street Journal reported that the U. S. Marshals Service was flying airplanes above American cities to secretly collect certain cellphone informatio­n from criminals while incidental­ly gathering data from innocent Americans.

The Justice Department would not confirm the practice, but said Friday the Marshals Service “does not maintain any databases for the purposes of retaining cellphone informatio­n of the general public.”

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