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The Failing Right of Laptop Privacy

davidwr writes "Wired has an interesting editorial on laptop searches and seizures. It raises some interesting issues, including employee rights against police searches in the workplace, routine vs. non-routine searches at ports of entry, and police use of unrelated data found in a database search. The article ends saying: 'Of course, there's a chance that the courts will not recognize the different scope of privacy interests at stake in computer searches, or will not be adept at crafting a rule that gives enough leeway and guidance to law enforcement, while also protecting privacy. At that point, the Constitution may fail us, and we will have to turn to Congress to create rules that are better adapted for the information age.'"

2 of 315 comments (clear)

  1. Re:At that point, the Constitution may fail us by sasdrtx · · Score: 0, Offtopic
    Excellent summary of the degradation of the Bill of Rights.

    I suggest, however, that you learn to spell and proofread. Every error detracts from your credibility.

    "...of us loosing our rights..."
    "...warrant less wire taping,..."
    "...How can the City of New London takes peoples land..."
    "Why is José Padilla been in jail for 4 years being tortured, when his case is still pre-trail?"
    "...accused of mutable crimes..."
    "...and widdle down the other rights..."
    "...the court would not allow him to use constructional law..."
    "...you can't use the construction..."
    "...but its entirely irreverent anymore."

    If you depend entirely on your spellchecker, you're going to look like an idiot.
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    Most people don't even think inside the box.
  2. Re:At that point, the Constitution may fail us by Chagrin · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    If you depend entirely on your spellchecker, you're going to look like an idiot.

    Comma splice, biznatch!

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    I/O Error G-17: Aborting Installation