Breaking developments from India: the government's considering a telecom sector pitch that would mandate always-on satellite positioning in smartphones. The stated goal? Enhanced surveillance capabilities for public safety.



Here's where it gets interesting—three tech giants are pushing back hard. Apple, Google, and Samsung have all raised red flags about this proposal, citing serious privacy implications. Their concern isn't unfounded: forcing persistent location tracking fundamentally changes the user-device relationship.

The telecom industry argues this would strengthen emergency response systems and help authorities track criminal activity. Fair point, perhaps. But critics wonder: at what cost to individual privacy? Once that door opens, closing it becomes nearly impossible.

This isn't just an India story. Similar debates are playing out globally as governments weigh security needs against digital rights. The crypto community especially should watch this closely—privacy erosion in one tech domain often bleeds into others.

What's your take? Does public safety justify always-on tracking, or is this surveillance overreach?
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