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11th Circuit Eliminates 4th Amend. In E-mail

Artefacto writes "Last Thursday, the Eleventh Circuit handed down a Fourth Amendment case, Rehberg v. Paulk, that takes a very narrow view of how the Fourth Amendment applies to e-mail. The Eleventh Circuit held that constitutional protection in stored copies of e-mail held by third parties disappears as soon as any copy of the communication is delivered. Under this new decision, if the government wants get your e-mails, the Fourth Amendment lets the government go to your ISP, wait the seconds it normally takes for the e-mail to be delivered, and then run off copies of your messages."

1 of 490 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Hold on... by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 0, Troll

    But there is another flaw in your argument. Bob cannot go and post an email that Alice sent to him on Facebook (well, legally at least). Even though Alice doesn't have 4th amendment rights over Bob's copy, she still does hold copyright over the message. She granted him an implicit license to read the work when she sent it to him. She did not grant a license to show that email to anyone else...

    ... and yet we're fine with ripping and distributing the information to which we are granted an explicit license to listen / watch the work when that license was sold to us.

    Boy I love the hypocrisy of this!

    Offering 3:1 odds on me being modded down Flamebait / Off-topic.

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