Showing posts with label Smartphone Users. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Smartphone Users. Show all posts

Saturday, November 2, 2013

Retailers smarten up with smartphone shoppers


WASHINGTON — As consumers seek to outsmart their local retailers with their smartphones, the stores are fighting back on the same front.

Retailers are increasingly gathering data from smartphone users in stores, tracking their locations and habits in an effort to boost sales and efficiencies.

While consumers often use their smartphones to compare prices, a practice known as “showrooming,” the retailers may be outsmarting them by collecting data on customer movements and activities from the electronic devices.

Brick-and-mortar retailers can be hurt by showrooming, but can also use smartphones to their advantage to reduce wait times for checkouts, stock the right merchandise and reward loyal customers.

The practice of tracking is drawing scrutiny from privacy activists even as the market for this technology shows sizzling growth.

“I can’t even count the number of startups in this field,” says Leslie Hand, retail analyst for International Data Corp.

Hand said it is difficult to estimate the value of this market because it is so new, but that retailers are anxious to use smartphone data “so they have as much information about the customers in the store as they do about the customers shopping online.”

By tracking users’ smartphones and their unique identifiers, retailers can tell how often a customer visits, how much time they spend in a location and other data. The “indoor location,” data which is similar to GPS, can use several kinds of technology including Wi-Fi or Bluetooth.

With this, retailers “can better understand customer buying behavior to market better, and possibly make an offer to them,” Hand told AFP.

The data collected is generally anonymous, aggregate information about flows of customers and patterns. But at a time when Americans are wary of government surveillance, this has raised the hackles of a number of consumer privacy groups and lawmakers.

John Soma, executive director of the University of Denver Privacy Foundation, said consumers should be giving “effective consent” to collect data and that may not be the case “when they put up a tiny sign” at a store entrance.

Soma said it is not clear what retailers and data firms are doing with the data: using it internally may be appropriate for store management, he said, but in some cases “that data floats out” to data brokers or other parties.

In a bid to head off complaints, a handful of data analytics companies announced a code of conduct in collaboration with the Future of Privacy Forum, a Washington think tank.

The code calls for posted signs that alert shoppers that tracking technology is being used, and instructions for how to opt out.

Jules Polonetsky, executive director of the Future of Privacy Forum, told AFP this is “a good code in a time when people are sensitive about privacy.”

He said it allows the smartphone users to remain anonymous and opt out of tracking, and to opt in to provide personal data which could allow the retailer to offer a discount or other promotion.

Senator Charles Schumer, who had criticized tracking as intrusive, called the code “a significant step forward in the quest for consumer privacy.”

Yet it remains unclear the degree to which retailers and the full range of data collection companies will adhere to the code.

National Retail Federation general counsel Mallory Duncan said the code “has been put together and signed on by some small technology companies.”

“I’ve not seen a great deal of comment from our retail members at this point. It’s still under review,” he told AFP.

But Duncan said the techniques are not new: retailers have traditionally used older methods to accomplish the same goals such as surveillance cameras or “hiring young people to stand at the end of an aisle with a clicker.”

Paul Stephens of the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse said the code of conduct is “vague” and that many consumers won’t understand it. Another issue may be that minors, including young children with smartphones, might be tracked without consent.

“There is a creepiness factor about it,” Stephens said. “One does not anticipate when they are in a public place that their location is subject to tracking and monitoring.”

Greg Sterling of the San Francisco consultancy Opus Research said that some privacy issues need to be addressed, but that consumers ultimately benefit from the technology.

“One of the major reasons people walk out of stores is they can’t find the product they are looking for, and a chief complaint is poor customer service,” Sterling said.

“So if you can use customer location to give them more information or give them help, it’s positive.”

Sterling said privacy concerns and consent must be addressed, but cautioned against holding back this new technology.

“Retailers are going to use this data because it’s so powerful,” he told AFP. “We should not shun the technology. We should have rules that protect people’s interest.”

source: interaksyon.com

Thursday, October 24, 2013

No more ‘dead spots’ for cellular mobile devices — Smart


MANILA, Philippines — Smart Communications Inc. on Monday said it has started testing on its network a boosting device that eliminates the “dead spots” inside homes and offices.

In a statement, Smart said the Cel-Fi device can dramatically improve mobile reception for voice and data in enclosed spaces.

“Cel-Fi offers a lot of promise because it functions much like a personal cell site and boosts the network performance in corners where signal strength is challenged,” Orlando B. Vea, Smart co-founder and chief wireless advisor said.

“As the leader in wireless services, Smart has continually been on the lookout for new technologies that can enhance the consumers’ mobile experience and offer the best value for them,” he added.

Cel-Fi addresses indoor dead spots by tapping at least one bar of available 3G signal and amplifying it, effectively boosting both 3G and 4G HSPA+ mobile connectivity throughout a specific area.

Designed by US-based Nextivity, the user-friendly device can handle 60 simultaneous calls and support high-speed connections reaching 42 Mbps in an area of up to 1,200 sq. m., making it ideal for homes and small offices.

Compliant with the strict standards of the Federal Communications Commission, Cel-Fi is authorized for use by 120 mobile operators around the world, including AT&T and T-Mobile.

source: interaksyon.com

Friday, September 13, 2013

New iPhone app targets child predators


WASHINGTON — The US Department of Homeland Security enlisted smartphone users in its fight against child pornography Thursday with an iPhone app intended to make it easy to report suspected child predators.

The Operation Predator app lets informants submit information via email or a telephone tipline, and also includes a run-down of the nation’s most-wanted alleged child sex offenders.

It is free to download via iTunes — albeit with a warning that it is not for persons under the age of 17, presumably the group most vulnerable to child sex crimes.

“When children are being sexually abused and exploited, it’s a race against the clock to rescue the child and bring the predator to justice,” said John Sandweg, acting director of US Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), the Homeland Security unit behind the app.

“These investigations are one of our highest priorities and, in today’s world, we need to be technologically savvy and innovative in our approach,” he said.

Topping the app’s list of nine fugitive suspects was one “John Doe,” a white male aged 45 to 55, “wanted for production of child pornography,” who could be living “anywhere in the world.”

ICE said the unidentified man appears in glasses and a beard in video files seen by ICE agents in Los Angeles earlier this year sexually abusing a girl aged between 10 and 12 in a wood-panelled room.

Other suspects — all wanted for making, distributing or owning child pornography — include a 35-year-old Indian national who allegedly helped run an Internet bulletin board for child-porn purveyors.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has for some time offered a broadly similar app that features not only America’s 10 most wanted criminals and terrorists, but also a list of missing children.

ICE said its app would be available for non-Apple devices “in the near future.”

source: interaksyon.com

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Google ahead of Facebook in mobile space


WASHINGTON — Google is leading Facebook in the race for smartphone users, a U.S. survey shows.

The report by comScore, a study of mobile behavior, found Google sites attracted 93 million of the 97 million Americans using their smartphones for the Internet.

Next was Facebook with 78 million, followed by Yahoo! (66 million) Amazon (44 million) and Wikimedia, which includes the Wikipedia site (39 million).

But it also found that 80% of time spent was represented by app usage compared to 20% via browser.

Twitter saw an even higher percentage of time spent with apps at 96.5% of all minutes.

The most popular app was Apple iTunes with 32 million users, followed by Google Maps with 29 million and Facebook with 26 million.

Social networking was a particularly popular activity on smartphones, and Facebook led the pack, with the average Facebook mobile user spending more than seven hours via browser or app in March.

Pinterest, which has seen its adoption explode in recent months, reached 7.5 million smartphone visitors who used the brand for nearly an hour.

Location-based social network Foursquare attracted 5.5 million mobile visitors at an average of nearly 2.5 hours, while Tumblr reached an audience of nearly 4.5 million who engaged for 68 minutes during the month.

source: japantoday.com