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The Courts

Supreme Court Declines To Hear Challenge To Warrantless Pole Camera Surveillance (aclu.org) 120

An anonymous reader shares a press release from the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU): The U.S. Supreme Court [Monday] declined to hear Moore v. United States, leaving in place a patchwork of lower court decisions on an important and recurring question about privacy rights in the face of advancing surveillance technology. In this case, police secretly attached a small camera to a utility pole, using it to surveil a Massachusetts home 24/7 for eight months -- all without a warrant. Law enforcement could watch the camera's feed in real time, and remotely pan, tilt, and zoom close enough to read license plates and see faces. They could also review a searchable, digitized record of this footage at their convenience. The camera captured every coming and going of the home's residents and their guests over eight months. As a result, the government targeted the home of a community pillar -- a lawyer, respected judicial clerk, devoted church member, and a grandmother raising her grandkids -- to cherry-pick images from months of unceasing surveillance in an effort to support unwarranted criminal charges against an innocent person.

Federal courts of appeals and state supreme courts have divided on the question of whether such sweeping surveillance is a Fourth Amendment search requiring a warrant. The highest courts of Massachusetts, Colorado, and South Dakota have held that long-term pole camera surveillance of someone's home requires a warrant. In Moore v. United States, the members of the full en banc U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit split evenly on the question, with three judges explaining that a warrant is required, and three judges expressing the belief that the Fourth Amendment imposes no limit on this invasive surveillance. This issue will continue to arise in the lower courts; the ACLU filed an amicus brief on the question in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit earlier this month.
"The Supreme Court's decision not to hear this case means that people across the country remain vulnerable to law enforcement's claim of unfettered authority to surveil any of us at our homes, for as long as they wish, with no judicial oversight," said Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of the ACLU's Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. "As the cost of surveillance technology falls and its use by law enforcement expands, the need to resolve whether the Fourth Amendment poses any constraint has become all the more urgent. We will continue fighting for essential privacy protections."

Comment Re:Good luck with that (Score 1) 328

I think that China is currently carefully studying the errors of the Russians in Ukraine, in order to learn and not repeat them. Also, if China do an embargo of the island, it will be quite difficult to deliver weapons and supplies to Taiwan, contrary to Ukraine.
Also, if the West decides to boycott Made in China products, like for the Russian gas, well... all the stores will have a lot of empty shelves, and no more IStuffs

Comment The Bad Side of this (Score 3, Insightful) 60

Obviously this is a good thing to work from everywhere. But this could also be bad in the middle or long term. Firstly is it same job same pay? For the cost of living, they will obviously hire someone from Idaho instead of California, unless the later is significantly better. Second, if there is no need to hire locally, unless you're a star, why wouldn't they hire in low-cost countries instead, e.g India? They can do the same job for a fraction of the price compared to the USA. And the best of all, no need anymore for a HB1 visas. So the clear winner here is AirBnb. For those who are just above average, therefore easily replaceable, be careful what you wish for.

Comment Filter Apps based on Privacy or Permissions (Score 4, Interesting) 14

For example, if I want a flashlight app without the permissions Full Network Access, Read Phone Status & ID, R&W Storage, Contacts, Phone Calls, Message access, I have to click and check the permissions of about 95% of the flashlight apps before finding one that needs No Permission.

A search with filters based on Permission would be really more useful. But I doubt it will be implemented, as spywares, trackings, "analytics" are the bread and butter of most apps and Google.

Comment You're not a good spy if you let yourself track... (Score 1) 50

... by Twatter

"...the ability to track the movements of billions of people via their phones with a constant stream of data purchased directly from Twitter..."

At a minimum I would have thought they would use a dumb or "clean" phone with firewall, dnsfilter, etc. Not a phone crippled with malware, and tweeting their latest exploits. Unless it is on purpose..

Also, it is quite strange that these companies reveal how they do it...

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