But, I won't. That doesn't man someone else won't. Near real time social networking tools like Facebook and Twitter, combined with geotagged photographs and tweets can make it very fairly easy for someone to track you down to your current location.
The website http://icanstalku.com/ scrapes the geotagged information from tweeted photos and posts it.
http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/i-can-stalk-u-geotagged-pics-worth-more-1000-
The website http://icanstalku.com/ scrapes the geotagged information from tweeted photos and posts it.
http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/i-can-stalk-u-geotagged-pics-worth-more-1000-
To raise awareness of geotagging and other hidden metadata added to smartphone pictures, security researchers created the I Can Stalk U website. The site explains that people who post pictures on Twitter "are allowing their movements to be recorded and analyzed by anyone: from a government to a nosy neighbor." If a cyberstalker wanted to, he or she could analyze your life after analyzing your photos. A stalker could discover where you live, how you commute, where and with whom you go to lunch, and even "why you and your attractive co-worker really like to visit a certain nice restaurant on a regular basis."