Politico.com: “Digital data privacy rules turn 25”

Politico.com: Digital data privacy rules turn 25 by Tony Romm:

Congress first penned the rules for how law enforcement may obtain digital data for investigations in 1986, long before most Americans — save academics and the military — had even used the Internet.

And as the Electronic Communications Privacy Act turns 25 this week, members of Congress are hearing it is time to revisit a law that never anticipated the day consumers would use Gmail, Facebook, Twitter, the iPhone and other tech staples of the digital age.

Lawmakers have updated the statute over the years, but disagreements linger in 2011 over how best to revise it again. In addition, the Department of Justice has actively avoided changes to the ECPA that might curtail its broad powers — maligned by privacy hawks and civil libertarians alike — to investigate crimes involving digital evidence.

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