What if the most powerful tracking tool in law enforcement's arsenal wasn't a court-ordered wiretap, but a simple, legal purchase from the same ad-tech companies that follow you online? A groundbreaking investigation by Citizen Lab reveals this is now a global reality, with agencies from Hungary to El Salvador to the U.S. using a service called Webloc to track an estimated 500 million devices worldwide. This episode dives deep into the chilling mechanics of ad-based geolocation surveillance. We'll explore how the advertising IDs on your phone—data points meant for targeting ads—are being repackaged and sold to governments, creating a pervasive, warrantless tracking network. The report links this system directly to Hungarian domestic intelligence, the national police in El Salvador, and multiple U.S. police departments, exposing a fundamental shift in how surveillance is conducted. Listeners will gain a critical understanding of the blurred line between commercial data collection and state surveillance. We'll break down why this method is so attractive to authorities, the legal gray zone it operates in, and what it means for privacy in the digital age. This isn't just about ads anymore; it's about the quiet construction of a global panopticon funded by the marketing industry. When the product is your daily movement, and the customer is the state, everyone is a target. #AdTechSurveillance #LocationTracking #CitizenLab #Webloc #PrivacyCrisis #LawEnforcement #DataBrokers #Geolocation Hosted by Ibnul Jaif Farabi. Produced by Light Knot Studios (lightknotstudios.com).
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