Surveillance

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Americans’ Privacy at Stake as Second Circuit Hears Hasbajrami FISA Case

When Congress reauthorized Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) in January, it ratified the warrantless collection of potentially millions of Americans’…

Legitimizing Foreign Mass Surveillance in the European Court of Human Rights

The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) is beginning to weigh in on a sweep of legislation passed, in recent years, that authorizes bulk interception of foreign communications…

Locking in Transparency on the Vulnerabilities Equities Process

Eight months ago, the White House released a charter for the Vulnerabilities Equities Process (VEP), the interagency mechanism by which the federal government decides whether to…

Carpenter Ruling Brings Us Back From Brink of Orwellian Surveillance State

Orwell described a world where limitless surveillance makes us question every action, every thought. Last Friday’s decision in Carpenter v. United States brought us one step…
Apps on a phone: Google Chrome, GoogleFotos, Googel Drive, Google Maps, Google Earth, and Google Calendar.

The Broad Reach of Carpenter v. United States

By focusing on the nature of the information rather than on the telecommunications nitty-gritty used to gather the information or the structure of the database in which the information…

Exigent Circumstances: iOS 12’s USB Restricted Mode and Warrantless iPhone Access

Apple recently confirmed the introduction of a new feature called “USB Restricted Mode” in the latest version of the iPhone’s mobile operating system, iOS 12. If enabled…
A DJI Mavic Pro Quadcopter drone is seen on flight at the Dronemasters 2017 convention on September 3, 2017 in Berlin, Germany.

Dangerous Drone Bill Emerges from Senate Committee

It’s rare that a congressional committee tasked with overseeing homeland security approves a bill that would not only authorize sweeping surveillance, but also could pose a significant…
As the U.S. Capitol is seen in the background, a CCTV camera is mounted on a building roof November 3, 2017 in Washington, DC.

What If Police Use ‘Rekognition’ Without Telling Defendants?

At least two US law enforcement departments -- and Motorola, which sells equipment to the government -- have already purchased access to Amazon’s “Rekognition” system. This…
A phone with the apps, GoogleMaps, FaceBook, Snapchat, and Twitter.

Digital Free for All Part Deux: European Commission Proposal on E-Evidence

The European Commission has released a proposal to enable EU-member states’ law enforcement authorities to access digital information regardless of where that data is stored.…

The Intel Community’s Annual Transparency Report Raises More Questions Than It Answers

The Office of the Director of National Intelligence's new mandatory report, summarizing certain intelligence agencies’ surveillance activities in 2017, is one of the most important…

The DNC Lawsuit and First Amendment Sensitivities

The First Amendment generally bars civil or criminal liability for publication of truthful material about a matter of public concern. That is true even in the case of stolen information.…

Cambridge Analytica, Big Data and China

As a researcher into China’s mass surveillance systems, I watch the revelations about the murky practices of the data marketing firm Cambridge Analytica and the debates about…
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