Daily Archives: April 14, 2016

WaPo: Microsoft sues over law banning tech firms from telling customers about data requests

WaPo: Microsoft sues over law banning tech firms from telling customers about data requests by Ellen Nakashima: Microsoft wants a federal judge in Seattle to strike down a law that allows courts to prohibit a tech company from telling customers … Continue reading

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Vice: Exclusive: Canadian Police Obtained BlackBerry’s Global Decryption Key

Vice: Exclusive: Canadian Police Obtained BlackBerry’s Global Decryption Key by Justin Ling and Jordan Pearson: A high-level surveillance probe of Montreal’s criminal underworld shows that Canada’s federal policing agency has had a global encryption key for BlackBerry devices since 2010.

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NYTimes: F.B.I. Used Hacking Software Decade Before iPhone Fight

NYTimes: F.B.I. Used Hacking Software Decade Before iPhone Fight by Matt Apuzzo: They persuaded a judge to let them remotely, and secretly, install software on the group’s computers to help get around the encryption. That effort, revealed in newly declassified … Continue reading

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CA6: CSLI is a mere business record subject to the third party doctrine and accessible without a warrant

CSLI is a mere business record subject to the third party doctrine and accessible without a warrant. United States v. Carpenter, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 6670 (6th Cir. April 13, 2016) (two articles at end of quote):

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TX: Common law and HIPAA creates a privacy interest in medical records; but GJ subpoena good enough

A hospital patient (here suspected of DUI) has a privacy interest in his medical records sufficient to give standing to challenge their acquisition by the state, but prior to HIPAA under state case law and bolstered by HIPAA. But, the … Continue reading

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E.D.N.Y.: Only one of three officers saw gun under streetlight; credibility here goes to the officer and why

Three officers were on patrol and only one saw defendant allegedly remove a chrome gun from one pocket and the glint of a streetlight off the gun. Defendant provided an affidavit that he never pulled the gun out, but he … Continue reading

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E.D.Va.: Denying ownership of phone and knowledge of password was a lack of REP

There were exigent circumstances for seizure of defendant’s cell phone because of the possibility of the phone being remotely erased or thrown away. Then defendant denied knowledge of the password or ownership of the phone, and that showed a lack … Continue reading

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CA8: Protective sweep of a camper was reasonable because another was inside when def was arrested

Defendant was supposed to sell methamphetamine from his camper at a campsite to an undercover officer, but he declined, so the officer attempted to arrest him outside the camper on an outstanding warrant and he fled. He went to the … Continue reading

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