Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Mobile
  4. News

University of Alabama is tracking students to see if they leave football games

Add as a preferred source on Google

University of Alabama football coach Nick Saban has long complained about students leaving Bryant-Denny Stadium before the game has finished.

They might head out because the mercury is pushing 100 degrees Fahrenheit, or maybe the team’s lead is so great that the game is as good as over.

Recommended Videos

In a bid to keep the students in their seats for longer, the team has just launched a loyalty program that rewards those who stay to the end. But it involves tracking students on their mobiles phones to make sure they’re still inside the stadium.

The New York Times, which first reported the story, described the tracking process as “an extraordinary, Orwellian step,” though Greg Byrne, athletic director at Alabama, said that few students or staff members mentioned privacy concerns when the idea was under discussion.

So, how exactly does it work? Well, to participate in the program, students first have to download the Tide Loyalty Points smartphone app. Attend a home game and the student’s account will be loaded with 100 loyalty points. Stay until the fourth quarter and they’ll receive an additional 250 points. Other points are awarded according to the amount of time a student spends on their studies, and the accrued points can be exchanged for access to the team’s big games.

The app only tracks students while they are inside the stadium in order that their presence can be registered for the loyalty points. Byrne told the Times that if students still have any concerns, they can simply delete the app and download it again the next time they enter the stadium.

FanMaker, the app’s creator, has launched apps for 40 other colleges across the U.S., though only the Alabama app includes location tracking.

As the Times notes in its report, perhaps we shouldn’t be so surprised that Alabama is utilizing tracking technology to try to improve attendance at its games. After all, most big-name online services include tracking technology in their apps to facilitate various features, and anyone with privacy concerns can deactivate location tracking by diving into their phone’s privacy settings. Digital Trends has an article telling you exactly what you need to do.

Byrne also pointed out that if you have a mobile phone, “unless you’re in airplane mode or have it off, the cellular companies know where you are.”

But Adam Schwartz, a lawyer for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, was less happy about Alabama’s loyalty program, describing it to the Times as “very alarming,” and adding that it was inappropriate to encourage students to give up their privacy in this way.

Meanwhile, Alabama students had other suggestions for how the team could keep them in the stadium for longer.

“Sell beer,” one said.

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
AppleCare+ prices are going up for new Mac and iPad customers
Existing AppleCare+ subscribers avoid Apple’s latest price hike
MacBook Pro on Table

Apple has raised the price of AppleCare+ subscriptions for new Mac and iPad customers, adding another expense to hardware that already became considerably more expensive last month. AppleCare+ provides technical support and repair coverage for accidental damage and other eligible issues.

Monthly AppleCare+ plans for Macs and iPads now cost $0.50 more, while annual plans have increased by $5. Existing subscribers will continue paying their current rates, as the change only applies to new sign-ups.

Read more
Hate editing videos? This new AI app turns your camera roll into ready-to-post reels
Reelful uses AI to plan, script, and edit your reels, so you never have to touch an editing app.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

Your camera roll is probably packed with vacation photos, birthday videos, and random clips that never make it to Instagram or TikTok. If video editing has kept you from posting more on social media, a new app wants to take that job off your plate entirely.

Reelful is an iOS app that uses AI to automatically turn your existing photos and videos into polished, ready-to-post reels for TikTok and Instagram.

Read more
Galaxy Z Fold 8: Everything we know about Samsung’s wider and shorter foldable
Samsung's widest Fold yet could finally make book-style foldables feel natural.
Rear camera for selfie on Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 7.

For most of its existence, the Samsung Galaxy Z Fold has solved one problem while creating another. The book-style foldable has let buyers carry a tablet-sized screen in their pocket without actually carrying a tablet. But, through no fault of its own, that came at the cost of a cover screen so tall and narrow that using it one-handed felt unnatural and uncomfortable. 

Further, viewing content on the inner screen came with giant black bars at the top and the bottom. Samsung is addressing that with the Galaxy Z Fold 8, which could feature an entirely new form factor. Think shorter, wider, passport-shaped, and a cover screen you can actually type on without contorting your fingers. 

Read more