HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094.jpg

1.84 MB

Extraction Summary

4
People
3
Organizations
2
Locations
1
Events
1
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: News article clipping / media report
File Size: 1.84 MB
Summary

This document appears to be a media clipping or report discussing GPS tracking technology for children, specifically highlighting 'Smart Shoes' by GTXC and a Baltimore Sun article from July 1, 2007. The article details an incident in Radford, VA, where a mother purchased tracking technology after her 7-year-old daughter was lost by the school system. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp, suggesting it was part of a congressional inquiry or evidence collection.

People (4)

Name Role Context
Joe Burris Author/Journalist
Author of the 'Follow That Kid' article for the Baltimore Sun.
Michelle Smith Parent/Subject
Mother interviewed in the article regarding tracking technology for her child.
Daysha Child/Subject
7-year-old daughter of Michelle Smith who was put on the wrong school bus.
Unnamed Neighbor Witness
Found Daysha and called Michelle Smith.

Organizations (3)

Name Type Context
GTXC
Los Angeles-based company manufacturing the 'Smart Shoe' GPS tracking footwear.
Baltimore Sun
Newspaper that published the article 'Follow That Kid'.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by the document footer stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094'.

Timeline (1 events)

April 2007
A substitute teacher placed 7-year-old Daysha on the wrong school bus; she was locked out of her home until found by a neighbor.
Radford, Va.
Daysha Michelle Smith Substitute Teacher Neighbor

Locations (2)

Location Context
Location of GTXC headquarters.
Location where the incident involving Daysha and the school bus occurred.

Relationships (1)

Michelle Smith Parent/Child Daysha
Michelle Smith had been reluctant to buy a cell phone for her 7-year-old daughter, Daysha.

Key Quotes (3)

"There is a trend in high-tech that recommends adding location-based services to anything and everything."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094.jpg
Quote #1
""Then my next-door neighbor called," said Smith, "and said, 'I have your baby.' ""
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094.jpg
Quote #2
"Wherever you go, there you are. And we know where you are."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,065 characters)

There is a trend in high-tech that recommends adding location-based services to anything and
everything. But it has me pulled between wanting to see really cool gadgets and avoiding a Big
Brother-like society.
The latest is a new high-tech tennis shoe coming to the market that lets parents and guardians track
the movements of their family using Global Positioning Systems or GPS technology.
Called the "Smart Shoe," the miniature device is inserted in the sole of the low-top sneaker. An
antenna that runs up the back of the footwear communicates with satellites and relays a location
back to a subscription Web site service for easy viewing. Los Angeles-based GTXC, which makes
the devices and the service, said it is hoping to put Smart Shoes in stores by the end of the year.
Shoes with the technology could cost between $100 and $200. The tracking service is expected to
cost about $20 a month.
Follow That Kid
Today's technology makes it easier for parents to know where their kids are and what they're
doing.
By Joe Burris | Baltimore Sun | July 1, 2007
Michelle Smith had been reluctant to buy a cell phone for her 7-year-old daughter, Daysha. Then
one day in April, a substitute teacher placed the Radford, Va., girl on the wrong school bus.
Instead of being dropped off at her older sister's after-school program as planned, Daysha was sent
home - only to find the doors locked.
As she sat on her front porch crying, her mother drove around town, searching frantically for the
girl. No one at the school could tell her which bus the girl had been put on.
"Then my next-door neighbor called," said Smith, "and said, 'I have your baby.' "
The scary moment had a happy ending, but Smith didn't want to take a chance on losing her
daughter again. So she did what many other parents are doing - she bought her child a cell phone
equipped with an electronic device that could keep track of her whereabouts.
Download the full article
Tracking technology hits the ground running.
Wherever you go, there you are. And we know where you are.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_032094

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