Big Brother is Tracking You (and how you can fight back)

Category: Privacy

You’re driving to work, your phone in the cup holder, your EZ-Pass humming quietly on the windshield. Maybe you’ve got OnStar in the background, logging every turn, every speed bump, every time you hit the brakes. At home, your Wi-Fi router blinks, feeding your Netflix habit. But underneath all of that, there’s a quiet, invisible web of surveillance that can map where you live, where you shop, and who you hang out with, often without you even knowing. Here's what you need to know, and do...

Do You Know the Tools of Mass Surveillance?

It’s not just “them” anymore. It’s your car company, your toll authority, your internet router, the coffee-shop Wi-Fi, those ubiquitous street cameras, and your employer’s IT department all quietly feeding data into systems that can profile you down to the inch and the second. The good news? As an ordinary home user, you don’t need a degree in cybersecurity to push back. You just need a few simple habits and a bit of awareness.

What Are You Wearing?

Wearables and fitness trackers are some of the sneakiest surveillance tools that people willingly strap to their wrists. Your Apple Watch, Fitbit, or Garmin quietly logs steps, heart rate, sleep stages, and sometimes even your location. This can build a detailed map of when you’re awake, when you’re stressed, and how much you move from day to day. Companies can use that data to infer health trends, lifestyle habits, and even mood swings, often feeding it into insurance-style risk models or targeted advertising.

Mass surveillance

Even if you don't wear one of these gadgets, an app on your phone may be tracking steps, distance, and flights climbed using built-in motion sensors. Some examples are the Google Fit app on Android phones and the Apple Health app on the iPhone. You have to turn on Google Fit if you want that tracking, but the Apple Health app is active by default on iPhones, coming pre-installed and ready to track data without extra setup.

To keep this under your control, treat wearables and fitness apps like any other tracking device: disable unnecessary sensors, turn off location when you don’t need it, and avoid linking them to accounts you care about keeping private.

When Your Car Becomes a Spy

Let’s start with the obvious: your car. If you’ve got OnStar or a similar connected-car system, your vehicle is already a rolling surveillance device. General Motors, for example, has been caught collecting precise location data as often as every few seconds, along with braking, acceleration, speed, and mileage, then quietly selling or sharing that data with third-party brokers and insurers. That means your “safe-driving” report could quietly bump up your insurance bill, even if you never signed up for that feature.

OnStar’s own privacy docs admit they use tracking technologies and cookies, and they can gather a ton of behavioral data if you don’t opt out. The FTC has since stepped in, forcing GM to get clearer consent and to stop dumping your driving habits into consumer-reporting pipelines for a few years. But the pattern is clear: connected cars are data-mining machines first, safety features second.

Don't get smug if you drive an older car that doesn't have OnStar or similar tech. Traffic and street-level cameras are quietly everywhere, on overpasses, at intersections, and tucked into highway gantries. And they’re not just watching for red-light runners. These systems can capture video of your car, your movements, and, crucially, your license plate, feeding into databases that log when and where your vehicle appears. In some cities, those plate-reader cameras are scattered far beyond toll plazas, building detailed travel histories that can show which neighborhoods you visit, how often you drive certain routes, and even how long you linger in a parking lot. Law-enforcement and toll agencies argue this helps with safety and toll enforcement, but it also means your car can be recognized and tracked across town without you ever seeing a camera flash.

What you can do:

  • Read the privacy settings in your car’s infotainment system. Turn off “telematics,” “driving-behavior tracking,” and “connected-services” if you don’t need them.

  • If you’re leasing or buying new, ask whether the car has always-on tracking and whether you can disable it. Some manufacturers let you opt out via a form or online portal.

  • Treat your car like a phone: assume it’s listening and watching unless you’ve explicitly turned that off.

EZ-Pass and the Toll-Booth Stalkers

Now picture this: you’re cruising down the Thruway, EZ-Pass beeping at the toll plaza, glad that you don’t have to fumble for cash. But those little plastic tags on your windshield aren’t just paying tolls. In New York and other states, E-ZPass readers are scattered all over the place, far from any tollbooth, logging when and where your tag shows up.

Privacy advocates found that city and state agencies were using these readers to track traffic patterns, but the data can easily be turned into a map of your movements: which exits you take, which neighborhoods you frequent, even how often you drive past certain intersections. Agencies insist the data is “anonymous,” but when you combine tag-read times with other records, it’s not hard to re-identify real people.

How to push back:

  • If you’re in a state that lets you opt out of extra tracking, read the fine print and say no. Some systems give you a chance to limit how long your data is stored.

  • Consider using cash lanes occasionally if you’re trying to break the pattern. It’s slower, sure, but it’s one of the few ways to avoid the tag-based trail.

  • Remember: EZ-Pass is convenient, but convenience is the currency of surveillance. Use it when you need it, but don’t assume it’s “just” a toll-booth gadget.

Wi-Fi: The Invisible Eye in Every Room

Now let’s talk about Wi-Fi. You probably think of it as the thing that keeps your laptop and phone online. But researchers are warning that Wi-Fi could become an “invisible mass surveillance system” that tracks people even when they’re not carrying a device.

Here’s the weird part: your body messes with radio waves. As Wi-Fi signals bounce around a room, they interact with people, furniture, and walls, creating unique patterns that can be analyzed to see where you’re standing, whether you’re sitting or walking, even who you are. A team at the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology showed that standard routers, using ordinary beamforming feedback, can identify individuals with near-perfect accuracy, no special hardware needed.

That café with “free Wi-Fi”? That mall with the “guest network”? Those routers could, in theory, log your presence every time you walk by. Even if you never connect. Even if you're not carrying a phone. Every router becomes a potential surveillance node, and every city block a low-resolution camera made of radio waves.

What you can do:

  • Turn off Wi-Fi and Bluetooth on your phone when you’re not using it, especially in public.

  • At home, use a wired connection when possible, and put your router in a central location so you don’t need to blast the signal through every wall. Less signal leakage means less data for anyone sniffing the airwaves.

  • If you’re extra paranoid, consider a Wi-Fi scheduler that turns the router off at night or when you’re away. It’s a small step, but it breaks the constant tracking loop.

The Everyday Tracking You Don’t See

Beyond cars and Wi-Fi, there’s a whole ecosystem of tools that organizations use to track people at work, at play, and on the move. Employers slap productivity-monitoring software on company laptops that logs keystrokes, screenshots, and app usage. Office badge systems and Wi-Fi networks map where you walk in the building, how long you linger at your desk, and when you leave.

Meanwhile, websites and apps are busy fingerprinting your browser, dropping cookies, and replaying your clicks in “session-recording” tools. Ad networks stitch together your browsing history, location, and device info into a profile that follows you across sites. It’s like a digital shadow that trails you everywhere, built from tiny scraps of data you never meant to hand over.

How to keep that shadow smaller:

  • Pare down app permissions. Open your device’s settings, tap “Apps” or “Applications,” then go into each app’s permissions and turn off anything that doesn’t make sense. Calculator app asking for location or microphone access? A game wanting to read your contacts? Just say no.

  • Use a VPN at home and on public networks. It won’t stop everything, but it hides your IP address and encrypts traffic from snoops on the same network.

  • Separate your work and personal devices. If your employer can monitor your work laptop, don’t use it for Netflix, banking, or anything personal.

A Few Simple Rules for the Rest of Us

You don’t have to become a privacy nerd to protect yourself. You just need a few good habits:

  • Assume everything is tracking you until you prove otherwise. That includes your car, your phone, your Wi-Fi, and your employer’s systems.

  • Opt out whenever you can. Privacy settings, tracking toggles, and “do not share” boxes exist for a reason. Use them.

  • Keep your devices updated. Patches fix security holes that could let bad actors piggyback on the same tracking systems that “legit” organizations use.

Surveillance isn’t going away. But by understanding the tools that track you, and by taking small, consistent steps to limit them, you can reclaim a bit of control in a world that’s always watching. And hey, if nothing else, at least you’ll feel a little less like a character in “The Matrix” every time you get in your car or walk past that “free Wi-Fi” sign.

What steps do you take to protect yourself from mass surveillance? Post your comment or question below...

 
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Most recent comments on "Big Brother is Tracking You (and how you can fight back)"

Posted by:

Bruce
19 Feb 2026

Turnoff wifi when you go for walks and driving both for security and to save battery power. The phone doesn't need to talk to every router it passes


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