ctovision: FBI vs Apple: Lessons From History and The Law on Protecting Privacy Rights

ctovision: FBI vs Apple: Lessons From History and The Law on Protecting Privacy Rights by Arnold Abraham:
Editor’s note: This is the fourth in a five-part series on this topic. This examination by Arnold Abraham provides insights and nuanced lessons from history, the law and the tech world that can inform all of us interested in both privacy and security. For a detailed legal analysis accompanying the article, please visit Thecyberlawteam.com/publications-1/  

Legal scholars Danielle Citron and David Gray made a case for “technology-centered approach” for protecting privacy rights. They proposed that “if a court finds that a challenged technology is capable of broad and indiscriminate surveillance by its nature, or is sufficiently inexpensive and scalable so as to present no practical barrier against its broad and indiscriminate use, then granting law enforcement unfettered access to that technology would violate reasonable expectations of quantitative privacy.”  Their goal was to develop a reasonably balanced approach that satisfied the Fourth Amendment standard with an “appreciation of both the law enforcement and privacy interests at stake.”

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