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FBI’s Bias for Keywords by Carlo Difundo by Carlos Difundo In September of 2021, then-Assistant Director for Counterterrorism Jill Sanborn told the Senate that the FBI did not monitor publicly available social media conversations. “It’s not within our authorities,” she told them, adding that the First Amendment barred them from …
Article • April 15, 2024 • from CLN April, 2024
Police Bodycams: If You Film It … by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson One hundred petabytes is a difficult quantity to comprehend. In plain English, that is about 113 quadrillion or 113 followed by 15 zeroes. According to ProPublica, that is the rough data equivalent of 25 million copies …
Tracking Your Cellphone Might Be Easier Than You Think by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson The University of Toronto’s Citizen Lab investigated weaknesses in the manner with which cellphones and their locations are passed from tower to tower. What they found was that it was remarkably easy for a …
Amazon Ring Curbs Police Access to Doorbell Camera Footage—But Privacy Concerns Remain by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott In a move applauded by privacy advocates, Amazon-owned Ring announced on January 24, 2024, that it will no longer allow police to request doorbell camera footage directly from users through …
A Legal Argument Against Government Purchase of Location Data by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The lack of effective privacy legislation covering the U.S.—combined with the occasional, poorly worded limitations imposed by the courts—has led to the current situation where law enforcement and other government agencies have been purchasing …
FBI Searches of NSA Data Extended Until April, Despite Admission of Unconstitutionality by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso As part of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal year 2024, signed by President Biden on December 22, 2023, Congress has extended the deadline to April 19th to fully re-authorize, …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
Suspicion of Government Surveillance Increasing by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The concern among Republicans and right-leaning independent voters that federal law enforcement agencies—particularly the FBI—are becoming politicized is driving an increase in the distrust these Americans have that these agencies will abuse access to personal data. Traditional conservative …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
Cops Just Love Secret Metadata Collection by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson Policing agencies throughout the country continue to find new ways to secretly surveil Americans. Senator Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, has discovered yet another way the cops are working in the dark to scrutinize the behaviors …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
Cops’ Sky-High Hopes by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson Drones as a first responder are the latest cop fad in America. They hope that drones will be able to arrive on the scene faster than a patrol officer and provide the lay of the land for arriving cops. Across …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
LexisNexis Aids Customs and Border Patrol to Flaunt Fourth Amendment by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso LexisNexis is known by many of Generation X as the provider of education software, but it is actually a data company that has applied its expertise in the controversial realm of human intelligence, …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
Understanding Fusion Centers by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson Introduction After 9/11, authorities determined the event was possible due to a failure of the various intelligence agencies to communicate with each other and share their information, data, insights, and discoveries. In 2007, Eben Kaplan wrote for the Council on …
Article • March 15, 2024 • from CLN March, 2024
Watchlisted: You’re Probably Already on a Government Extremism List by John W. Whitehead, Nisha Whitehead by John & Nisha Whitehead, The Rutherford Institute—Commentary “In a closed society where everybody’s guilty, the only crime is getting caught.”—Hunter S. Thompson  According to the FBI, you may be an anti-government extremist if you’ve: …
Geofence Warrants: The Mass Location Surveillance and Privacy Threat Created by Google May Be Eliminated by Its Creator by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable …
New Jersey Supreme Court Excludes CSLI Testimony Based on Agent’s ‘Rule Of Thumb’ Method for Determining Defendant’s Location by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The Supreme Court of New Jersey held a lower court erred when it allowed an FBI agent to testify about cell site location information (“CSLI”) …
Article • February 15, 2024 • from CLN February, 2024
NYPD Has Spent Millions of Dollars on Social Media Analysis Tools by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott The New York City Police Department (“NYPD”) has spent millions of dollars of taxpayers’ money buying products from tech company Voyager Labs that claims it can analyze social media to track …
Article • February 15, 2024 • from CLN February, 2024
New Night-Vision Capable Drone Marketed to Police by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso Skydio, a popular drone manufacturer, released the new X10, whose main selling point is an infrared camera, which allows it to track people and fly autonomously in the dark. The company began making hobby drones about …
FBI Works to Expand Court Authority for Its Offensive Cyber Operations by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W. Accurso The FBI’s effort to disable an army of zombie computers being used for cyber-crime is pretty mediagenic, but it is the latest step in the DOJ’s plan to render jurisdictional limits on …
Article • February 15, 2024 • from CLN February, 2024
Who Let the Dogs Out? Robotic Dogs Are the Newest (and Scariest) Surveillance Tech in U.S. Police Departments by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott After months of debate, the Los Angeles City Council approved the donation of a $280,000 robotic police dog in late May of 2023 in …
Article • February 15, 2024 • from CLN February, 2024
Data Mining: Law Enforcement Pays Cash for Your Private Data and Saves on the Hassle of Complying With the Fourth Amendment by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney According to an investigation by The Wall Street Journal, a company known as Near Intelligence purchases individuals’ private data from brokers who usually …
The White House Goes Rogue: Secret Surveillance Program Breaks all the Rules by John W. Whitehead, Nisha Whitehead by John & Nisha Whitehead This essay originally appeared in Rutherford on November 29, 2023. “We are rapidly entering the age of no privacy, where everyone is open to surveillance at all …
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