Nokia and UC Berkeley researchers
tested technology that could soon transform the way drivers navigate through
congested highways and obtain information about road conditions. One hundred
cars equipped with the GPS-enabled Nokia N95, and driven by students from the
University of California, traveled a 10-mile stretch of highway near San
Francisco to show how real-time traffic information can be collected from the
GPS feed, while preserving the privacy of the devices' owners.
The experiment was carried out to
test the traffic data collection and aggregation system, while studying the
trade-offs between data accuracy, personal privacy, and data collection
costs. The software aggregating the GPS feeds immediately disassociates
that data from an individual device and combines it with the general stream of
traffic data. To protect privacy, all data is anonymous and aggregated, and
protected by banking-grade encryption
During the experiment, special
software on the mobile devices periodically sent anonymous speed and location
readings from the integrated GPS to servers. The feeds were then combined to
create a real-time picture of traffic speeds and projected travel times.
"Mobile device users control
the service. If an individual does not want their device to transmit position
data they turn off the feed from their GPS," stated Quinn Jacobson,
Research Leader at Nokia Research Center, Palo Alto.
"Nokia is very excited at the
potential for this system to revolutionize travel planning, carrying on from
the Nokia Maps navigation service available today on certain Nokia
devices," continued Jacobson. "Integration of traffic information
with functions such as calendar and online timetables may one day mean the
mobile device can act as personal travel planner."
"There are mobile device-based
systems out there that can collect data in a variety of ways, such as measuring
signal strength from towers and triangulating position, but to our knowledge,
this is the first demonstration of this scale using GPS-enabled mobile devices
to provide traffic related data such as travel times, and with a deliberate
focus on critical deployment factor
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