The blogosphere finally notices the assault on email privacy via the Patraeus affair and email searches

The Stored Communications Act is a legal dinosaur. Technology has left our privacy rights in the “dust,” as it were. The blogsphere is finally outraged about the ease of government access to email. Maybe this will get Congress off its lazy ass to do something.

Just a few I’ve seen:

WSJ: Affair Highlights Uncertainty of Email-Privacy Laws by Ashby Jones and Joe Palazzolo posted yesterday.

Likely the Best One from EFF, of course: When Will our Email Betray Us? An Email Privacy Primer in Light of the Petraeus Saga by Hanni Fakhoury and Kurt Opsahl and Rainey Reitman:

The unfolding scandal that led to the resignation of Gen. David Petraeus, the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, started with some purportedly harassing emails sent from pseudonymous email accounts to Jill Kelley. After the FBI kicked its investigation into high gear, it identified the sender as Paula Broadwell and, ultimately, read massive amounts of private email messages that uncovered an affair between Broadwell and Petraeus (and now, the investigation has expanded to include Gen. John Allen’s emails with Kelley). We’ve received a lot of questions about how this works—what legal process the FBI needs to conduct its email investigation. The short answer? It’s complicated.

CNET: Petraeus e-mail affair highlights U.S. privacy law loopholes | Because of the wording of an obscure 1986 federal law, the former CIA director — and the rest of Americans — receive less privacy protection than we would for love letters stored under a mattress by Declan McCullagh

WaPo: FBI investigation of Broadwell reveals bureau’s comprehensive access to electronic communications

San Francisco Chronicle: Petraeus scandal reveals threat to privacy

Politico: David Petraeus affair scandal highlights email privacy issues

Reuters: Collateral damage of our surveillance state by Julian Sanchez:

As the surreal sex scandal that forced CIA Director David Petraeus’ resignation reveals another prominent general’s “flirtatious” emails, the serious scandal here may well be the breadth of the FBI’s power to launch fishing expeditions through Americans’ most intimate communications.

onthemedia.org: Will the Patraeus scandal be good for privacy?

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