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Current Volume of Digital Evidence Challenge the Criminal Justice System to Do Better by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott In an open access article first publishedonline on April 20, 2023, in The International Journal of Evidence & Proof, researchers from England and New Zealand discuss the challenges defense …
Did You Know Popular Video Doorbells Are Equipped with Facial Recognition? by Jordan Arizmendi Jordan Arizmendi The next time you arrive at a door that is equipped with a camera, as you glance into that lens, be cognizant that someone, somewhere could be analyzing your identity with facial recognition technology. …
New English Law Allows Government to View a Year’s Worth of Browsing History from an Individual Approved by a Judge by Wired reported on May 15, 2023, that law enforcement actors in the United Kingdom have decided to move forward with introducing vast new surveillance capabilities on a national scale. …
The ACLU Calls for a Moratorium on Blanket Recording of ALPR Footage by Kevin Bliss by Kevin W. Bliss The American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”) has published an appeal to the general public asking for organized opposition to the encroaching blanket surveillance company, Flock Safety. Concerns continue to be expressed …
TSA Tests Facial Recognition Technology at Airports, Lawmakers Criticize Increased Surveillance by Miles Dyson by Miles Dyson The Transportation Security Administration (“TSA”) has ignited a fierce debate over privacy and surveillance as it pushes forward with trials of facial recognition technology at airports across the United States. While proponents argue …
Article • May 13, 2023
FBI Continues Its War Against Public Key Encryption but Fails to Provide Evidence Requested by Congress by Miles Dyson by Miles Dyson In cynical move, the FBI has taken a controversial step towards advancing its anti-encryption agenda. Requesting assistance from local law enforcement agencies, the FBI has asked officers to …
Article • May 6, 2023
FBI’s Anti-Encryption Campaign Sparks Controversy by In an era of heightened digital privacy concerns, the FBI finds itself at the center of a swirling controversy surrounding its persistent campaign against encryption. The Bureau’s concerted efforts to establish backdoors in encrypted communication systems have ignited a fierce debate, pitting security and …
Article • May 5, 2023
U.S. Marshals Service’s Secretive Surveillance Unit Still Recovering Months After Ransomware Attack by The U.S. Marshals Service’s electronic surveillance division, which operates in secrecy to track down fugitives, has been struggling to recover from a ransomware attack that occurred over two months ago. The incident highlights the ongoing threat that …
Article • April 15, 2023 • from CLN May, 2023
California Court Rejects Geofence Warrant by Anthony Accurso by Anthony W Accurso A California trial court held that a geofencewarrant obtained by the San Francisco PD violated the Fourth Amendment and the recently enacted California Electronic Communications Privacy Act (“CalECPA”), requiring future warrants to be more narrowly tailored. People v. …
Article • April 15, 2023 • from CLN May, 2023
Beware of Smart Devices That Infringe on Your Privacy by Casey Bastian by Casey J. Bastian The Surveillance Technology Oversight Project (“STOP”) released a review of smart devices entitled: “The Trojan House.” The revelations are concerning. If you like your privacy and don’t want strangers, hackers, and law enforcement surveilling …
The FBI Used an Undercover Cop With Pink Hair to Spy on Activists and Manufacture Crimes by Trevor Aaronson by Trevor Aaronson The young woman with long pink hair claimed to be from Washington state. One day during the summer of 2020, she walked into the Chinook Center, a community …
Article • April 15, 2023 • from CLN May, 2023
How Minneapolis Uses Controversial Technology to Spy on Its Citizens by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson Through a series of public records requests to the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office, Unicorn Riot (a non-profit, media-based organization of journalists) has obtained rare insight into how the police department responsible for George …
Article • April 9, 2023
Smart Locks Violate Tenants’ Privacy and Provide Valuable Information to Police by by Jordan Arizmendi People are often blindly attracted to the latest form of technology. As long as the contraption makes our lives easier, any invasion of privacy that it might entail is ignored. Smart locks are a perfect …
Article • April 9, 2023
The Number of Surveillance-Based Officer-Citizen Encounters Is Increasing by by Jordan Arizmendi Eyes in the skies are watching us. We are safe behind our bedroom doors. But when we are out in public, thanks to the latest in invasive police surveillance technology, there is always the possibility (even probability) that …
Article • March 16, 2023
Technology Allows for Overbroad Searches on Warrants by Kevin Bliss by Kevin W. Bliss Geofence location and reverse search warrants are the new trends in law enforcement agencies’ criminal investigations. But, their use concerns civil rights advocates because of the overbroad scope of their results and the means by which …
Article • March 15, 2023 • from CLN April, 2023
Law Enforcement and Mad Men by Douglas Ankney by Douglas Ankney About two decades ago, the TV network AMC had a hit show entitled Mad Men. Starring Jon Hamm and others, it portrayed the foibles of the financially elite but morally bankrupt men and women in the business of writing …
Article • March 15, 2023 • from CLN April, 2023
The Mounting Geofencing Threat by Michael Thompson by Michael Dean Thompson The January 6th Capitol riot illustrates how geofencing warrants are threatening American citizens. As part of the investigations into the events, the FBI served a geofencing warrant to Google that demanded a list of all the devices in or …
Police Departments’ Purchase of Tracking Tool Collecting Location Data Without a Warrant Raises Fourth Amendment Concerns by Jo Ellen Nott by Jo Ellen Nott In July 2022, the Virginia State Police paid $15,000 to purchase a subscription from Fog Data Service for its Fog Reveal tracking tool according to ABC …
Article • February 15, 2023 • from CLN March, 2023
Minneapolis Police Department Surveillance Operation Kneels on the Neck of the First Amendment by Casey Bastian by Casey J. Bastian The actions and eventual trial of Derek Chauvin were at the center of multiple protests. The people had had enough of police brutality and a lack of accountability in Minneapolis; …
Article • February 15, 2023 • from CLN March, 2023
Invasions of Privacy for People on Electronic Monitoring Is a Warning of Worse Things to Come by Benjamin Tschirhart by Benjamin Tschirhart In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the paradigm has shifted for the millions of Americans on “community supervision” — a category which includes those on probation, parole, …
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