7 Privacy Threats the Constitution Can't Protect You Against
By Tana Ganeva
When it comes to a spate of new technologies, our privacy protections are wildly outdated.
February
4, 2012 | Last week, the Roberts Supreme Court uncharacteristically
handed down a decision that doesn't radically infringe on civil
liberties. The justices unanimously ruled that police overshot their
authority by planting a GPS device on suspected drug dealer Antoine
Jones' car without a warrant, tracking his movements for over a month.
For now, Americans can rest assured that police can't secretly tag them
-- at least without a warrant.
At the same time,
privacy advocates pointed out -- and some of the justices admitted --
that the court's majority opinion in US vs. Jones completely skirted
more pressing privacy issues. The problem, the majority argued, was that
police had trespassed on Jones' private property by planting a GPS
device on his car. The majority opinion did not address whether or not
it's okay for law enforcement to use a sophisticated surveillance
technology to log someone's movements for a whole month without a
warrant.
Saturday, February 4, 2012
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