Daily Archives: May 5, 2014

Grits for Breakfast: Virginia, Utah, require warrants for phone location data, Tennessee bill awaiting gov’s signature

Grits for Breakfast: Virginia, Utah, require warrants for phone location data, Tennessee bill awaiting gov’s signature: More states have approved legislation requiring law enforcement to obtain warrants to track cell-phone location data, measure that passed the Texas House last year … Continue reading

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Network World: No reasonable expectation of privacy when third parties cross the creepy line?

Network World: No reasonable expectation of privacy when third parties cross the creepy line? by Ms. Smith: A former DHS official suggests SCOTUS has no business expanding Fourth Amendment protections to protect our privacy from third parties who cross the … Continue reading

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New Law Review Article: School Surveillance And The Fourth Amendment

Jason P. Nance, School Surveillance And The Fourth Amendment, 2014 Wis. L. Rev. 79. Abstract: In the aftermath of several highly-publicized incidents of school violence, public school officials have increasingly turned to intense surveillance methods to promote school safety. The … Continue reading

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WaPo: Volokh: Smith v. Maryland as a good first-order estimate of reasonable privacy expectations

WaPo: Volokh: Smith v. Maryland as a good first-order estimate of reasonable privacy expectations by Stewart Baker: Earlier, I promised a post that would make the positive case for the third-party doctrine and Smith v. Maryland. The case against it … Continue reading

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