CNET: Geofence warrants: How police get data from all devices in targeted areas

CNET: Geofence warrants: How police get data from all devices in targeted areas by Alfred Ng (“The National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers is also challenging the constitutionality of geofence warrants in a Virginia case. The organization argues that geofence warrants are unconstitutional because of how broad the requests are. ‘This is no ordinary warrant. It is a general warrant purporting to authorize a classic dragnet search of every Google user who happened to be near a bank in suburban Richmond during rush hour on a Monday evening,’ the association said in court documents. ‘This is the kind of investigatory tactic that the Fourth Amendment was designed to guard against.'”)

Salon: Police are using protests as an excuse to unleash new surveillance tech (“Experts fear a severe threat to free speech posed by drones and other novel surveillance tools”)

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