Mobile tracking services get parental thumbs-up

And youngsters want friend-tracking too

NEWS

Tracking applications could be a lucrative location-based service for mobile operators to exploit according to research.

Mobile tools that allow individuals to be located and tracked would appeal to two distinct groups according to the Location-Based Services: Where Are You report from analyst house JupiterResearch.

Forty-two per cent of the parents surveyed, all with children under the age of 13, said they would be interested and willing to pay for services that would allow them to track the whereabouts of their children.

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♦ Mobile location-based services
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Julie Ask, research director at JupiterResearch, said that as only a small number of children under 13 currently have mobile phones, the level of interest from parents is significant.

In addition, just over one-quarter (26 per cent) of mobile users aged 18 to 24 said they would be interested in mobile social networking apps based on the location of their friends.

But the use of some location-based services already available remains low. Just three per cent of mobile users surveyed said they use mobile navigation tech such as maps or turn-by-turn navigation.

The report suggests operators should try to educate consumers as they become more interested in the technology, to capitalise on the growing consumer base.

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Mike Grenville

    So why is it that most of the LBS companies offering child tracking services are no longer around?

    Maybe it is because the idea and reality are not the same as the level of accuracy offered by mobile triangulation is not enough to be useful to a parent, even in urban areas.

    This would be different with GPS but only a few phones have it. And how many kids would actually consent to their parents knwoing which side of the road they were on unless they were so scared of going out alone that they probably shouldn't.

    • 10 August 2007 10:29
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  2. 2. anonymous

    I think parents who use these things should have more faith in their children and trust them more.

    • 22 October 2008 18:58
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