The buzz: Ripped from the headlines. \u201cYour Apps Know Where You Were Last Night, and They\u2019re Not Keeping It Secret\u201d (NY Times 12/18): \u201cDozens of companies use smartphone locations to help advertisers and even hedge funds. They say it\u2019s anonymous, but the data shows how personal it is\u2026One path tracks someone from a home outside Newark to a nearby Planned Parenthood, remaining there for more than an hour\u2026\u201d And April 3, 2020: \u201cGoogle is publicly releasing the data it's already collecting about people's movements during the coronavirus pandemic\u2026to show the types of places people are visiting across 131 countries and regions\u2026it hopes tracking movement trends over time and by geography could help shape and inform governments' and public health officials' response to the coronavirus pandemic. We\u2019ll ask Heather Federman at Big ID, Joe Jerome at Common Sense Media and Kenesa Ahmad at Aleada for their take on \u201cEveryone Knows Where You Were Last Night and Right Now: The Future of Location Data.