Mobiledia.com: “In Brief: GPS, Cell Records and Warrants, Oh My!”

Mobiledia.com: In Brief: GPS, Cell Records and Warrants, Oh My! by Margaret Rock:

Can your phone’s location data be used as evidence in court trials? The Supreme Court and the Obama administration are wrangling over the issue, and the fallout will shape the legal landscape for years to come.

When the Supreme Court made the highly-anticipated ruling earlier this year that law enforcement’s placement of a GPS tracking device on a suspect’s vehicle violated the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable search and seizure, nobody, much less the average person, was sure of the far-reaching ramifications.

During the case’s subsequent re-trial briefings, both the federal government and the defense team brought issues to light, forcing the courts and the wireless industry to re-examine what information and records — like GPS data and cell phone records — constitute a “search,” and establish when law enforcement needs a warrant to access the data as the courts navigate the digital frontier.

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