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"If it tells you where to find water, it's good," he said at a Tijuana, Mexico, migrant shelter. The phone designers say they are addressing the concerns, with an eye toward having the phone ready by midsummer. "We don't want to create a safety tool that actually puts people in more danger," Stalbaum says. The water locations beamed to the phones will be updated constantly to ensure accuracy. If the distance is too far, they won't appear on the screen. The designers, who have raised $15,000 from a UCSD grant and an art festival award, hope to hand out phones for free in Mexico. The phones sell used for about $30 apiece. It costs nothing to add the GPS software. Distribution would be tightly controlled by migrant shelters and advocacy groups to keep them away from anti-illegal immigration activists. The migrants would need passwords to use them. U.S. authorities are unfazed. The Border Patrol has begun a $6.7-billion plan to drape the border with whiz-bang cameras, sensors and other technology. "It's nothing new," said Border Patrol spokesman Mark Endicott. "We've seen handheld GPS devices used by smugglers. ... We're just going to have to learn to adapt to any challenges." Critics of illegal immigration say the device is misguided, at best. "If it's not a crime, it's very close to committing a crime," said Peter Nunez, a former U.S. attorney in San Diego. "Whether this constitutes aiding and abetting would depend on the details, but it certainly puts you in the discussion." The software is being designed to direct migrants to water stations but Cardenas said they may add other "safety markers," like roads, towns and Border Patrol lookouts. The group has published verses to be played on the phone's "Global Poetic System." One poem reads, "May your tracks cut the shortest distance between points A and B." ___ On the Net: Transborder Immigrant Tool, http://bang.calit2.net/xborder/
[Associated
Press;
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