WaPo: E-mail privacy hasn’t been updated in 28 years. This could be the bill to do it.

WaPo: E-mail privacy hasn’t been updated in 28 years. This could be the bill to do it. by Brian Fung:

Thanks to a law that was written before “Robocop,” law enforcement agencies are allowed to poke around inside your e-mail inbox without a warrant. Messages from six months ago are fair game. So are e-mails you’ve already opened. Other types of content we typically store in the cloud these days — photos, videos, documents, contacts and the like — also lack the Fourth Amendment protections that would ordinarily accompany their real-world copies.

A bill to fix that law is inching steadily forward. But it’s been more than a year since the proposal, the Email Privacy Act, was introduced. If it takes much longer to wind its way through regular channels, one of its authors is vowing to invoke one of a number of shortcuts that would force his changes past the House.

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