Daily Archives: June 1, 2014

news.gnom.es: Quantifying Privacy: A Week of Location Data May Be an “Unreasonable Search” & New Law Review Article: Mosaic Theory and Machine Learning

News Gnomes: Quantifying Privacy: A Week of Location Data May Be an “Unreasonable Search” When does the simple digital tracking of your location and movements — the GPS bleeps from most of our smartphones — start to be truly revealing? … Continue reading

Posted in Cell phones, GPS / Tracking Data, Informational privacy | Comments Off on news.gnom.es: Quantifying Privacy: A Week of Location Data May Be an “Unreasonable Search” & New Law Review Article: Mosaic Theory and Machine Learning

NYT: Book Guiding Border Agents on Force Is Released

NYT: Book Guiding Border Agents on Force Is Released by Julia Preston: The top official at the federal border agency released on Friday for the first time the full text of its handbook on the use of force by border … Continue reading

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The Atlantic: The City Where Blacks Suffer Under ‘Stop and Frisk on Steroids’

The Atlantic: The City Where Blacks Suffer Under ‘Stop and Frisk on Steroids’ by Conor Friedsdorf Police abuses in Miami Gardens, Florida, are staggering, but few Americans seem to care. Last year, police in Miami Gardens, Florida briefly made headlines … Continue reading

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WaPo Editorial: Consumers should be able to see the data companies collect about them

WaPo Editorial: Consumers should be able to see the data companies collect about them: MANY AMERICANS are discovering the hard way that they live in a world of prying eyes. This is the underside of the digital revolution. Tens of … Continue reading

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WaPo: Cleveland police indictment part of wider deadly force investigation

WaPo: Cleveland police indictment part of wider deadly force investigation: A police chase that ended in a schoolyard with two unarmed suspects dying in a hail of 137 bullets is part of a broad federal investigation of the Cleveland Police … Continue reading

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NYT: N.S.A. Collecting Millions of Faces From Web Images

NYT: N.S.A. Collecting Millions of Faces From Web Images by James Risen and Laura Poitras: The National Security Agency’s reliance on facial recognition technology has grown as it has used new software to exploit images in emails, text messages, social … Continue reading

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E.D.Tex.: “there is no magic number of ‘trash runs’ to be conducted prior to the issuance of a search warrant.”

“As to Defendant’s challenge of a single trash run at forming probable cause, there is no magic number of ‘trash runs’ to be conducted prior to the issuance of a search warrant.” Here, there was enough from one to make … Continue reading

Posted in Ineffective assistance, Probable cause, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on E.D.Tex.: “there is no magic number of ‘trash runs’ to be conducted prior to the issuance of a search warrant.”

IN: Seizure of clothes from professed crime victim was reasonable; turned out he was the suspect

When defendant’s clothes were seized by the police at the hospital, it was because he said he was a crime victim. When the police figured out he was lying and he was the shooter, they got a search warrant to … Continue reading

Posted in Emergency / exigency, Reasonable expectation of privacy, Reasonable suspicion | Comments Off on IN: Seizure of clothes from professed crime victim was reasonable; turned out he was the suspect

WaPo: E-mail privacy hasn’t been updated in 28 years. This could be the bill to do it.

WaPo: E-mail privacy hasn’t been updated in 28 years. This could be the bill to do it. by Brian Fung: Thanks to a law that was written before “Robocop,” law enforcement agencies are allowed to poke around inside your e-mail … Continue reading

Posted in Informational privacy, Reasonable expectation of privacy, Warrant requirement | Comments Off on WaPo: E-mail privacy hasn’t been updated in 28 years. This could be the bill to do it.