DigitalCrazyTown: “Google Exec: Data Privacy Laws Violate the Fourth Amendment”

DigitalCrazyTown: Google Exec: Data Privacy Laws Violate the Fourth Amendment by Cynthia Brumfield:

(Washington, DC) The main existing law that limits the scope of law enforcement electronic snooping violates the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution when it comes to Internet communications, a top Google expert said here today. Speaking at the Congressional Internet Caucus’ Annual State of the Internet Conference, Google’s Director of Law Enforcement and Information Security Richard Salgado said that “our view is that the statute [the Electronic Communications Privacy Act or ECPA] is out of compliance with the Fourth Amendment because the government can call for the production of your data without a search warrant.” The Fourth Amendment guards against unreasonable searches and seizures by the government.

ECPA, drafted in the 1980s when telephones were the primary mode of electronic communications, does not extend to email or other forms of Internet communication. Under ECPA, government authorities can and do request user information records with either commonplace, easy-to-issue subpoenas or with little more than written notices stating that the data are pertinent to an investigation. Telephone wiretaps, on the other hand, are usually subject to more stringent requirements for search warrants, which are issued by courts and judges and are based on the legal standard of probable cause.

Two queries:
(1) Why is this website the first to report this?
(2) Why isn’t Google, with more money than the U.S. Government, not litigating this? Or are they waiting for the right opportunity to sue?

This just states the obvious: Technology can overwhelm statute, and that makes it unconstitutional. That’s exactly what happened with ECPA.

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