Court Upholds Warrantless Internet Snooping
amigoro writes to let us know about an appeals court ruling on Friday that holds that federal agents can snoop on an individual's web surfing, email and all other forms of Internet communication habits without a warrant. The court found recording this kind of information to be analogous to the use of a pen register. In 1979 the Supreme Court ruled that this technique did not constitute a search for Fourth Amendment purposes.
People died for the Freedom that too many of us seem willing to trade away.
If the worst thing that happens to you is some jail time because you refused to reveal your keys, consider yourself ahead of the game.
Fascism begins when the efficiency of the Government becomes more important than the Rights of the People.
Encryption. Learn it. Love it. Live it.
Until they illegalize it. Or, as I understand England has done, simply make it illegal to withhold your keys from government agents.
Even in the scenario where you are required to surrender your keys, encryption is still quite useful in the context of this article / warrantless searches. The authorities would need a warrant to make you surrender your keys, and you would know you were being spied upon.
__ Someday, but not this morning, I'll finally learn to use the preview button.
The constitution isn't divine. I call for a reform.
Be careful what you wish for - the "reform" might not be quite what you wanted, citizen.
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
The way I look at it, if you could catch one more "bad guy" a day
Lots.
As opposed to Ben Franklin's:
They'd rather follow Otto Bismark's opinion:
The problem is that it is the Government that chooses what "crime" and what "evidence" will be used to charge a person.
And the Government is composed of people. Sometimes honourable. Many times petty and vindictive if not outright criminals. Which is why our country was founded upon the belief that you cannot trust the Government. That we had to limit the Government's authority and protect the Rights of the People.
It's all about how you view Rights and whether you are with Franklin or Bismark.