Two Apple customers have sued the company for invasion of privacy and computer fraud over reports that the iPhone and iPad tracks and stores data on a user's location, Bloomberg reports.

The complaint was filed Friday in federal court in Tampa by Vikram Ajjampur, an iPhone user in Florida, and William Devito, an iPad owner in New York. They asked a judge to bar Apple from collecting location data.

Lawmakers have asked Apple to respond to last week's revelations, and at least one has called for an inquiry.

No comment on the suit from Apple, which has also not officially responded to two programmers' findings that the iOS4 operating system is logging latitude and longitude, plus the time a place is visited.

Unofficially, Apple CEO Steve Jobs reportedly responded to a MacRumors reader's email, saying, "We don't track anyone."

Jobs reportedly also said Google's Android OS does track users.

Computerworld offers up "some truth" about the Apple vs. Android tracking kerfuffle.