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Why following your stars is about to get a whole lot easier

Tom Peck
Friday 15 October 2010 00:00 BST
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(REX FEATURES)

The celebrity stalking industry can be dated back to the 1950s, when enterprising young bucks on Hollywood Boulevard began selling maps showing the homes of movie stars. Next week, it will take a giant leap forward, with a website that will map not just Hollywood but the entire planet, and not the stars' homes, but the stars themselves.

Justspotted.com, which launches on Tuesday, has been developed in close collaboration with Twitter for two years. It will scan the Twittersphere, Facebook and other social media, for news on the whereabouts of the 7,000 celebrities in its database – be it posted by the celebrity in question or someone who has spotted them in the street – and overlay that information on a map of the world.

It is not the first incarnation of a website of this type. In 2006, the media website Gawker launched Gawker Stalker Maps, a very similar service, prompting the US talk show host Jimmy Kimmel to say to the site's editor on live television: "I would hate to see you arriving in hell and somebody sending a text message saying, 'Guess who's here.'"

George Clooney also took issue with Gawker Stalker Maps, circulating an email to celebrity publicists suggesting that they counteract the site by getting people to "flood their website with bogus sightings". Gawker has since discontinued the service.

The new website has already provoked considerable concern.

"It's another step in the direction of Big Brother society," said the celebrity publicist Max Clifford. "And potentially very dangerous. There are a lot of very funny people out there. If they are going to be able to easily know where celebrities are then there is a chance it puts them at risk."

But according to founder and CEO A J Asver, JustSpotted operates by aggregating information that's already publicly available. He claims the "celebrity-friendly" site is about fans making a psychological connection with stars rather than a physical one.

"The information isn't real-time enough for you to run over there and see them," he said – though this may depend on how long said celebrity stays at the same location. Asver hopes the site can be used in conjunction with celebrities, including helping them to promote their movies, television shows, concerts and the products they endorse. Mr Clifford also sees potential for the more fame-hungry figures.

"If you make the distinction between celebrities and stars, yes. Celebrities are desperate for any publicity they can get. I'm sure anyone on Big Brother would love to be on it. And yes, it might mean that people can draw attention to somewhere that they want to be seen – a big store, or fashion show – and then get it in the papers."

The site's relationship with the tabloid media, together with its heat sensor-like tracking ability, also gives PR man Richard Hillgrove cause for concern.

"What happens when some footballer's latest crime turns up on the front of the News of the World, and suddenly there's a website telling you where he is? This site can be used to facilitate a witch-hunt," he said. "You could create vigilantism, that's a very dangerous aspect of it."

Privacy lawyer Rod Dadak of Lewis Silkin predicted that JustSpotted would struggle to survive. "Its existence will most certainly be challenged at an early stage," he said. "If you tweet to the world saying where you are, you can have no expectation of privacy.

"But if someone else tells the world where you are, in a place where you can have a reasonable expectation of privacy, then you have cause to complain. In my view, Justspotted.com will soon be Justgoneoutofbusiness.com."

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