So you can selectively enforce them and punish and/or silence your enemies of course.Bravo, Legislature.
If a law is broken, and nobody notices, is it still illegal?
Why have laws at all?
So you can selectively enforce them and punish and/or silence your enemies of course.Bravo, Legislature.
If a law is broken, and nobody notices, is it still illegal?
Why have laws at all?
He discusses real issues, while packaging them attractively with his comedy, so that people will watch. Seriously, we need more John Olivers in this world.John Oliver is the hero we need. Seriously, is he the only real journalist around any more? Fucking SNOWDEN?!? I call that an amazing get.
And he didn't just pitch softballs at him, either. It was a legitimate piece of journalism that ended up wrapped in comedy. Simply amazing.
Keep in mind this is all cell phones, not just smart phones.While the CDT and others seek beefed-up constitutional restrictions on the ability for law enforcement to obtain court orders in such cases, the FBI says the process for obtaining such court orders is already adequate.
"We work under the strict provisions of the law with regard to our ability to obtain a court order," said Barry Smith, supervisory special agent in the FBI's office of public affairs. "Law enforcement's access to [cell phone data] falls very much within the parameters of the Fourth Amendment." He also says that under CALEA, the call data the FBI seeks does not provide the specific location of a wireless phone.
...but only when requested from the cell phone carrier.So the Fourth US Circuit Court just yesterday ruled that location data is no longer private, and thus is available without warrant.
Ya maybe! Having NO court oversight over tracking you at any time is very police-state.
I don't know if it's valid, but they want to track your movements for usage data to improve the appeal of their services, and for targeted advertising.It's something that should be easily countered. Just need to get a resolution passed that prevents carriers from maintaining a log of your location data for more than 48hrs or something. Police can have all the location data they want, just nothing older than 2 days. When it comes right down to it, I really don't know what valid business reason a carrier would have for keeping a log of your location data anyway.
--Patrick
Basically this... but ultimately, I think providers are just going to stop carrying your information for more than a day or two. All it's going to take it one high profile government abuse of this to convince people to switch providers to someone who won't. We already have phones specially built to prevent stuff like this, like the BlackPhone.I don't know if it's valid, but they want to track your movements for usage data to improve the appeal of their services, and for targeted advertising.
This ruling essentially means that the police could use a court order to have a live feed of all the cell phone location data all the time, without picking and choosing individuals and timeframes. They wouldn't need to prove a need for this information, nor a specific investigation.It's something that should be easily countered. Just need to get a resolution passed that prevents carriers from maintaining a log of your location data for more than 48hrs or something. Police can have all the location data they want, just nothing older than 2 days. When it comes right down to it, I really don't know what valid business reason a carrier would have for keeping a log of your location data anyway.
--Patrick
The first could be easily generated with a simple heatmap of traffic, absolutely no identifying data would be needed. As for the second, they shouldn't be inspecting/injecting/modifying my requested content in the first place.I don't know if it's valid, but they want to track your movements for usage data to improve the appeal of their services, and for targeted advertising.
I did consider that (it is, after all, the lesson taught to us in Aasimov's "The Dead Past"), but I also assumed that either a) they would be drowned under the sheer volume of data generated, or b) people in power would be unhappy about having their movements so monitored, and so would work to quash the idea.This ruling essentially means that the police could use a court order to have a live feed of all the cell phone location data all the time, without picking and choosing individuals and timeframes. They wouldn't need to prove a need for this information, nor a specific investigation. So even with the limits you propose, it's possible for them to get your information specifically and do with it what they want.
American radio scanners do.Radio scanners have a blank spot on their dial right where cell phones used to transmit.
You choose to allow those companies to have that information by using their products. The government is not asking for permission, they are just taking it, so this is a false comparison.ITT: Facebook, Google and Microsoft, and a dozen app makers, can all have my exact location all the time, but Heaven Forbid the government could see where I am!
It's not that.ITT: Facebook, Google and Microsoft, and a dozen app makers, can all have my exact location all the time, but Heaven Forbid the government could see where I am!
So if you get hacked by a foreign government, while entirely in a country you have citizenship in, you can't sue or otherwise reprise in any way against said government. Also, as they said above, if they get a drone into the country, and blow you up (or whatever), again, no recourse.A court of appeals in Washington D.C. ruled that an American citizen can't sue the Ethiopian government for hacking into his computer and monitoring him with spyware.
...
In late 2012, the Ethiopian government allegedly hacked the victim, an Ethiopian-born man who goes by the pseudonym Kidane for fear for government reprisals. Ethiopian government spies from the Information Network Security Agency (INSA) allegedly used software known as FinSpy to break into Kidane's computer, and secretly record his Skype conversations and steal his emails. FinSpy was made by the infamous FinFisher, a company that has sold malware to several governments around the world, according to researchers at Citizen Lab, a digital watchdog group at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs, who studied at the malware that infected Kidane's computer.
...
"If a foreign government can send a robot via software or physical [means] into the United States," Cardozo said, paraphrasing something the EFF director Cindy Cohn said, "this opinion gives foreign governments complete immunity for whatever their robots do within the United States."
...
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit ruled that Kidane didn't have jurisdiction to sue the Ethiopian government in the United States. Kidane and his lawyers invoked an exception to the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act (FSIA), which says foreign governments can be sued in the US as long as the entire tort on which the lawsuit is based occurred on American soil.
...
According to the court, however, the hacking in this case didn't occur entirely in the US.
"Ethiopia's placement of the FinSpy virus on Kidane's computer, although completed in the United States when Kidane opened the infected email attachment, began outside the United States," the decision read.
For Cardozo and the EFF, the court is simply wrong.
"Our client was in the United States the whole time. What Ethiopia did to my client, they did to him in his living room in Maryland. They didn't do it in Ethiopia, they didn't do it in London. They did it in Maryland," Cardozo said.
It really just gives everyone a license to shoot down ANY drone at ANY time, on grounds of self defense. "The courts say I have no legal recourse if a foreign government attempts to harm me with a drone. Therefore, I get to shoot down any drone in order to defend myself from foreign governments".This thread isn't perfect for this, but it is kind of related: Court Says Hacking Victim Can’t Sue a Foreign Government For Hacking Him on US Soil
Bold is mine:
So if you get hacked by a foreign government, while entirely in a country you have citizenship in, you can't sue or otherwise reprise in any way against said government. Also, as they said above, if they get a drone into the country, and blow you up (or whatever), again, no recourse.
This is a terrible ruling IMO. Think of it in terms of government collaboration! "Hey Canada, we don't like this guy, can you hack him, and give us all the information?" That'd be LEGAL by one interpretation.
Likewise for this:This thread isn't perfect for this, but it is kind of related:
GOP senators’ new bill would let ISPs sell all your Web browsing dataSen. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.) and Rep. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) last week introduced Congressional Review Act resolutions that would overturn the Federal Communications Commission's privacy rules for Internet service providers and prevent the FCC from issuing similar regulations in the future.
If [these] FCC rules are eliminated, ISPs would not have to get consumers' explicit consent before selling or sharing Web browsing data and other private information with advertisers and other third parties.
So I would point out that this brings them more in line with what online companies are allowed to do. While I think there is good case to be made for explicit acceptance and transparency in data collection I'm not in favor of being randomly selective with regulations. There's not a very good case why you should limit your ISP and let Facebook or Google for example (and they're one of the better companies with your data) run wild.
Well, I think the ISP collecting my browsing data sounds more like eavesdropping on me while I am shopping, whereas Facebook or Google collecting my data is more like giving my contact info to the tire store where I am buying the tires from.So I would point out that this brings them more in line with what online companies are allowed to do. While I think there is good case to be made for explicit acceptance and transparency in data collection I'm not in favor of being randomly selective with regulations. There's not a very good case why you should limit your ISP and let Facebook or Google for example (and they're one of the better companies with your data) run wild.
It should have never been an FCC regulation in the first place. It should have been a bill or not at all.
If Facebook or Google share their data, then they are sharing what you do with properties belonging to Facebook or Google*.So I would point out that this brings them more in line with what online companies are allowed to do. While I think there is good case to be made for explicit acceptance and transparency in data collection I'm not in favor of being randomly selective with regulations. There's not a very good case why you should limit your ISP and let Facebook or Google for example (and they're one of the better companies with your data) run wild.
It should have never been an FCC regulation in the first place. It should have been a bill or not at all.
But the US pretty much has to rule this way since they continue to do exactly that sort of thing in other countries.This thread isn't perfect for this, but it is kind of related: Court Says Hacking Victim Can’t Sue a Foreign Government For Hacking Him on US Soil
Bold is mine:
So if you get hacked by a foreign government, while entirely in a country you have citizenship in, you can't sue or otherwise reprise in any way against said government. Also, as they said above, if they get a drone into the country, and blow you up (or whatever), again, no recourse.