GPS

(PAUL SAKUMA/The Associated Press) Yasir Afifi is seen at his home in San Jose, Calif., where a GPS tracking device was placed on his car.

Supreme Court bars police from GPS tracking without warrant

WASHINGTON -- In a rare defeat for law enforcement, the Supreme Court unanimously agreed on Monday to bar police from installing GPS technology to track suspects without first getting a judge's approval. The justices made clear it wouldn't be their final word on increasingly advanced high-tech surveillance of Americans.

Indicating they will be monitoring the growing use of such technology, five justices said they could see constitutional and privacy problems with police using many kinds of electronic surveillance for long-term tracking of citizens' movements without warrants.

While the justices differed on legal rationales, their unanimous outcome was an unusual setback for government and police agencies grown accustomed to being given leeway in investigations in post-Sept. 11 America, including by the Supreme Court. The views of at least the five justices raised the possibility of new hurdles down the road for police who want to use high-tech surveillance of suspects, including various types of GPS technology.

GPS could be used to deter poachers

ANNAPOLIS, Md. -- A pilot program to install tracking devices on some commercial fishing boats in the Chesapeake Bay may go into effect next year.

Morgan District approves GPS school bus tracking

MORGAN -- A Morgan mother readies her children for school on a bitter, snowy morning.

GPS users can be led astray if they don't engage common sense

SEATTLE -- When three women visiting the Seattle area took a wrong turn while following a GPS early Wednesday morning, they and the Mercedes SUV they were in ended up in a pond.

But they're not the first GPS users to get confused and end up stuck, or worse.

From 2006 to 2010, there were 623 collisions, two of them fatal, reported in Washington state in which an electronic device -- other than a phone or audio-entertainment system -- such as a GPS or computer, contributed to the crash, according to the state Department of Transportation.

Central Washington University geologist Tim Melbourne points out locations of GPS monitors in the Ellensburg, Washington-based PANGA network. (Steve Ringman/Seattle Times/MCT)

Scientists track motions of shifting plates using GPS

SEATTLE -- The Pacific Northwest is a restless place.

The ground is being shoved by tectonic plates. Snow-capped volcanoes inflate and deflate in concert with the creep of molten rock. Coastlines bulge as tension builds on an offshore fault very like the one that snapped in Japan March 11.

Scientists now can track these minuscule motions as they happen, thanks to an expanded network of GPS sensors that covers the region like a blanket and beams back data almost instantly.

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