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Update Use cases
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Using benefits template
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edpars0ns committed Jan 14, 2021
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Expand Up @@ -289,7 +289,7 @@ <h2>Use Case 1: Use of social media geotagging to raise awareness of issues</h2>
</aside>
</section>
<section id='use-case-2'>
<h2>Use Case 2: Traffic</h2>
<h2>Use Case 2: Realtime Traffic Data </h2>
<p>
For the last decade or more mobile maps applications and online map tools have displayed “real time”
traffic information as different coloured roads indicating the relative speed of traffic. This speed
Expand All @@ -299,18 +299,29 @@ <h2>Use Case 2: Traffic</h2>
significantly reduce journey times and the resulting pollution.
</p>
<ul class='note' title='Benefits'>
<li>TBD</li>
<li>Survey results ( suggest that the average commumter was able to save 6 hours of annual travel time on public transport, and 13 hours of annual travel time by private car.</li>
<li>The total value of time savings as a result of using traffic datat on maps was estimated to have surpassed US$260 billion in 2016</li>
</ul>
<aside class='example' title='Example 1'>
TBD
<aside class='example' title='Fuel Savings'>
A large-scale <a href="https://www.valueoftheweb.com/reports/the-economic-impact-of-geospatial-services/">consumer survey</a>, undertaken in 2016 , suggested that more than 2 billion commmuters globally use digital maps when traveling on public transport and 2.5 billion people use
digital maps for car trips. Commmuters who make use of live traffic data derived from mobile phone locations within navigation systems to find the fastest route through traffic are estimated to have saved,
on average, an additional $10 per person on fuel
per year in 2016.
</aside>
</section>
</section>
<section id='misuse-cases'>
<h2>Misuse Cases</h2>
<section id='misuse-case-1'>
<h2>Misuse Case 1: Washington Cyclist Example</h2>
<h2>Misuse Case 1:Inadvertent location sharing</h2>
<p>
Smartphones and other personal devices which are both able to estimate their location and connect to mobile data networks have the ability of share the operators location explicitly and implicitly with other users connected to the same network. Beyond the users own awareness of location sharing activities there may be unintended consequences of personal location data becoming public, the exif data added automatically by the camera app of a smart phone will pinpoint the phone at a particular location and time, meaning the user cannot be at other location.
<ul class='note' title='Disbenefits'>
<li>Sharing your location via photogrpahs for example, could indicate to criminals that you are not at home and increase the risk of burglary</li>
<li>Use of "Find my device" applications on smartphones may allow stalking of the phones owners by abusive partners without their expicit knowlwdge</li>
</ul>
<aside class='example' title=' Washington Cyclist Example'>
<p>
One evening in June 2020 Peter Weinberg, a marketing executive living in Washington DC began to
receive social media message threats as a result of mistaken identity. These threats were to a large
extent the consequence of his decision to share his location with an online cycling community.
Expand All @@ -329,11 +340,6 @@ <h2>Misuse Case 1: Washington Cyclist Example</h2>
This use case is fully described in the following linked article:
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2020/06/what-its-like-to-get-doxed-for-taking-a-bike-ride.html
</p>
<ul class='note' title='Benefits'>
<li>TBD</li>
</ul>
<aside class='example' title='Example 1'>
TBD
</aside>
</section>
</section>
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