HuffPo: “A Fourth Amendment for the 21st Century”

HuffPo: A Fourth Amendment for the 21st Century by Julian Sanchez:

The resignation of CIA Director David Petraeus has thrown a spotlight on the FBI’s sweeping power to sift through the most intimate details of our digital lives — often with little or no judicial supervision. On Thursday, the Senate Judiciary Committee will consider legislation that would modestly improve the outdated law governing police access to our emails and other electronic records — yet even this first step toward meaningful online privacy reform is encountering strong resistance.

Most Americans know that the Fourth Amendment protects us against “unreasonable searches and seizures” — requiring a judge to issue a specific warrant based on “probable cause” before government agents can search our homes, open our mail or wiretap our phones. Most probably assume that the same protection applies to their email conversations and other sensitive information stored in “the cloud,” such as documents, photos, chat logs and records of their Web browsing habits. Unfortunately, under the misnamed Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, that’s not true.

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