[Infowarrior] - Software lets parents monitor kids' calls

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Tue Jul 10 13:27:03 UTC 2007


Software lets parents monitor kids' calls

http://news.com.com/Software+lets+parents+monitor+kids+calls/2009-1025_3-619
5666.html?tag=nefd.lede

By Stefanie Olsen
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
Published: July 10, 2007 4:00 AM PDT

In March, 15-year-old Joshua Brumfield got a shiny new BlackBerry Pearl, and
his parents got a new way to watch out for their son.

The Brumfields signed up to be early users of Radar, software designed to
let parents monitor incoming calls on their child's mobile phone. Anytime
Joshua gets a call from someone not on a call list approved by his parents,
they will receive a real-time text alert on their cell phone or online.

For example, during the first two days on the phone, Joshua got six calls
from a stranger within a few hours--and the Brumfields got six text alerts.
So they asked Joshua about the calls, and he told them they were from a man
looking for his ex-girlfriend who didn't believe that her number had
changed. The stranger had grown more aggressive with each call, thinking
that Joshua was a new boyfriend.

"Radar really helped us see this was definitely a problem, one our son
wouldn't have said anything about," said Lisa Brumfield, a Laguna Hills,
Calif., mother of three boys. Joshua's father called the man to straighten
out the situation.

The Brumfields were among the first adopters of Radar, which was released
this spring by Newport Beach, Calif.-based security company EAgency Systems.
Initially, the Radar software, which costs about $10 a month on top of a
wireless plan, has worked only with BlackBerry devices and other smart
phones, a factor that has limited growth. But according to Bob Lodder, the
company's founder, Radar is poised for wider distribution through deals with
Motorola and Verizon Wireless.

The company is working through a certification process with Motorola so that
the software will work with Razr phones. (A Motorola representative didn't
immediately return a call for comment.) Lodder also said the company is in
talks with Verizon Wireless, which has a subscriber base of more than 60
million. Verizon Wireless representative Jeffrey Nelson said he couldn't
comment on any potential relationship with EAgency.

A few hundred people have subscribed to Radar so far, Lodder said.

Still, Radar could mark a shift toward greater monitoring by parents through
cell phones, much the way it happened on the Web years ago. As more kids
live their lives on mobile devices--text messaging, sending photos,
scheduling school assignments, surfing the Web and calling their social
circle--some parents are using tracking software to protect them from
predators or bullies, or to simply stay connected.

In the last year, several companies have introduced mobile technology that
let parents track their kids, primarily between the ages of 8 and 15.
Disney, for example, last year started selling a phone service called Disney
Mobile, which lets parents set time parameters on their kids' cell phone
usage and track the location of their handsets using GPS, among other
features. In 2006, Verizon also started selling a service called Chaperone,
which for $10 a month lets parents use the phone's embedded GPS chip to
locate the cell phone (and presumably the kid). For another $10 a month,
Verizon also sells "geo-fencing," a service that lets parents set geographic
barriers, or zones, within which their child can use the phone during
prescribed times and places, such as within 10 yards of the school yard on
weekdays.

The wireless carriers don't break out adoption rates for these services, but
Verizon's Nelson called it a niche market.

"This is a great feature for a pretty finite group of consumers. It's not a
giant mass market," Nelson said.

Researchers say that tweens are among the fastest growing segments of the
cell phone population. Roughly 12 percent of U.S. children ages 8 to 9 have
cell phones, and 24 percent of kids ages 10 to 11 have cell phones,
according to a February survey from market research firm JupiterResearch.

Lodder, who founded EAgency five years ago to make the mobile management
software Nice Office, developed Radar as a way to deal with the issues
parents face in a mobile-phone culture. He's particularly concerned with the
threat of predators using cell phones to get at kids age 8 to 14.

"A lot of what was happening online is moving to the cell
phone--cyberbullying and harassment--and most of its use is unmonitored. We
wanted to help solve those issues," he said.

His company developed Web-based software that lets parents log onto a secure
site, called Mymobilewatchdog.com, to manage their account. Once a parent
signs up for the monthly service, Radar will download the software
wirelessly to a compatible phone. The parent then goes online to set up a
child's friends and family call list, and can log back on anytime to see a
record of all calls (numbers and duration), full text messages, and soon,
MMS picture messages, which have been sent to the Radar-installed phone.

And if anyone who's not on that approved list tries to call or text-message
the child's phone, Radar sends a real-time alert to the parent's phone,
regardless of his or her carrier or hardware. Parents can also see a copy of
the text message on their phone, or see which numbers have called the phone.

For example, Lisa Brumfield got a text message last Saturday at 2 a.m.
warning her that a stranger had just called Joshua, who was spending the
night at a friend's house. She asked him about it the following morning.
"Every time I get an alert of an unusual phone call, I ask him about it.
This turned out to be a wrong number," she said.

Joshua is well aware that the software is installed on his BlackBerry--the
Radar logo is displayed on the phone--and he doesn't mind, he said. But
privacy advocates warn that this kind of monitoring can erode trust between
parent and child.

"Kids' privacy rights are by custom and tradition, like respecting closed
doors and journals," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the
Washington-based privacy group Electronic Privacy Information Center.
"Constant surveillance of your kids or secret surveillance of your kids may
not be the best way to build trust, and that's something parents need to
consider."

He added that clever kids will often find a way around tracking software.
For example, youngsters have been known to use Web proxies to work around
filters installed in school computer labs. Rotenberg said that he's also
heard of kids using aluminum foil to disable GPS locators on the cell phone.

Still, Lodder is hoping that Radar will be used by law enforcement agencies
to catch and convict predators. He said that the tamper-proof data-retention
system his company has built creates a record of evidence that could be
admissible in a court of law. "We operate on the idea that long before
something bad happens to a child, there's a chain of communication and we
want to intervene early on that chain."

Send insights or tips on this topic to stefanie.olsen at cnet.com.




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