Law in the Internet Society

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ClodaghHoganSecondPaper 3 - 23 Aug 2014 - Main.EbenMoglen
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The Expanding Surveillance State


ClodaghHoganSecondPaper 2 - 31 Mar 2013 - Main.EbenMoglen
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The Expanding Surveillance State
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The Expanding Surveillance State

 The US government through the FBI, federal intelligence agencies, the military, state and local police and private companies, is collecting incredible amounts of personal information about American citizens. This surveillance takes place with little or no oversight by the courts, the legislature or the public. This surveillance activity is not directed solely at terrorists and criminals, but at everybody. Increasingly, the government is engaging in suspicionless surveillance that tracks sensitive information about innocent people. The lack of restrictions on the government's power to collect people's personal information puts the right to privacy and freedom of speech at risk. This situation is only exacerbated by the current trend of giving private companies so much access to the intimate details of our lives.
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The idea of the Government wiretapping our phonelines and accessing our private emails would to most of us seem entirely unrealistic. Most of us presume we are not of any interest to be spied on, thus we would not be spied on, and surely the Government would need a very good reason to do so? Technically, the US government must have a warrant to wiretap US citizens However, there are many loopholes which they use in order to keep an eye on the digital lives of its citizens. By presenting a simple subpoena to companies like Google and AT&T, the authorities have instant access to your texts and emails. This may have happened to any of us already and we would never know.
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The idea of the Government wiretapping our phonelines and accessing our private emails would to most of us seem entirely unrealistic. Most of us presume we are not of any interest to be spied on, thus we would not be spied on, and surely the Government would need a very good reason to do so? Technically, the US government must have a warrant to wiretap US citizens.

What does "wiretap" mean?

However, there are many loopholes which they use in order to keep an eye on the digital lives of its citizens. By presenting a simple subpoena to companies like Google and AT&T, the authorities have instant access to your texts and emails.

Not legally accurate. You should have stated the rules correctly, including precision about "authorities," "texts," and "emails."

This may have happened to any of us already and we would never know.

Under what circumstances would we know and under what circumstances would we not? You haven't been specific enough.

One might wonder exactly how the government can access your digital data without a warrant. Getting a warrant requires showing "probable cause" of a crime.

Not accurate either. Wouldn't it be advisable to give a precise statement of law, linking to secondary or primary sources explaining or stating the law?

This quite high standard is required for police to listen to your phonecalls. However, to get information on the phone numbers you call and when, as well as incoming calls, police do not need a warrant, but a subpoena, which requires a significantly lower standard of evidence, that of the data being relevant to an investigation. Lesser standards are also required for cell phone location data, text messages, cloud data and emails older than 180 days.

This is a more precise statement, though still a little vague in necessary places, but it's not linked to anything, whereas each of the substantives should be a link to a relevant statement of law.

For some reason the law gives greater protection to recent emails than to older ones.

Give the reason, please.
 
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One might wonder exactly how the government can access your digital data without a warrant. Getting a warrant requires showing "probable cause" of a crime. This quite high standard is required for police to listen to your phonecalls. However, to get information on the phone numbers you call and when, as well as incoming calls, police do not need a warrant, but a subpoena, which requires a significantly lower standard of evidence, that of the data being relevant to an investigation. Lesser standards are also required for cell phone location data, text messages, cloud data and emails older than 180 days. For some reason the law gives greater protection to recent emails than to older ones.
 
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Enacted in 1986, the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, is in dire need of modernization to reflect the new digital economy. The way we communicate using technology has massively changed in 25 years and yet the ECPA has remained exactly the same, creating a gap between the law and users’ reasonable expectations of privacy. The Senate recently took a step toward improving privacy protection for emails, by approving an update to the 1986 ECPA that requires law enforcement officials to obtain a warrant before they can read emails older than 180 days. However, at the end of December, the Senate decided, without explanation, to drop the proposed amendments, and so for the present, law enforcement officials will continue to be able to access cloud-based data with only a subpoena.
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Enacted in 1986, the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, is in dire need of modernization to reflect the new digital economy. The way we communicate using technology has massively changed in 25 years and yet the ECPA has remained exactly the same, creating a gap between the law and users’ reasonable expectations of privacy.

Maybe. But maybe you shouldn't store all your lifetime email traffic at Google, and a rule telling you to get your email into private storage after 180 days if you want to keep it private is a very good rule. Would you really object if the Post Office didn't leave all your mail in the box if you never collected it?

The Senate recently took a step toward improving privacy protection for emails, by approving an update to the 1986 ECPA that requires law enforcement officials to obtain a warrant before they can read emails older than 180 days. However, at the end of December, the Senate decided, without explanation, to drop the proposed amendments, and so for the present, law enforcement officials will continue to be able to access cloud-based data with only a subpoena.

No. They will be able to get "abandoned" email by asking for it. That doesn't imply anything about "cloud-based" data. And if Google, which stores a good deal of this supposedly "abandoned" mail, actually acts as proclaimed, and litigates to require warrants in cases where it doesn't receive them for Gmail contents, the law will have changed whatever Congress does or doesn't do.

Last year, US Magistrate Judge Steven Smith examined the history behind the ECPA court orders, and was shocked to discover, not only the incredible number of emails and other inbox data obtained by the police under the ECPA, but that most people who had been surveilled under it were completely unaware. In his report

Which you don't link?

he comes to the conclusion that it is reasonable to infer that far more law-abiding citizens than criminals had been tracked under the provisions of the ECPA. This emphasises the immediate necessity of enforcing a strict search warrant requirement, as well as a new level of transparency into how and why this data is collected.

Because innocent people have more or more important constitutional rights than guilty ones?
 
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Last year, US Magistrate Judge Steven Smith examined the history behind the ECPA court orders, and was shocked to discover, not only the incredible number of emails and other inbox data obtained by the police under the ECPA, but that most people who had been surveilled under it were completely unaware. In his report he comes to the conclusion that it is reasonable to infer that far more law-abiding citizens than criminals had been tracked under the provisions of the ECPA. This emphasises the immediate necessity of enforcing a strict search warrant requirement, as well as a new level of transparency into how and why this data is collected.
 The extent of the expanding surveillance state was exposed by the New York Times in 2005 in an article uncovering the NSA's domestic spying program. This program, intended to monitor communications of suspected terrorists within the US, in fact also had an impact on millions of innocent citizens, never suspected of a crime. The government has amassed, through the major telecommunications companies, a database of detailed call-records of customers (which includes customer's names, addresses and calls), without any warrants or judicial supervision. These telecommunications companies also allowed the NSA to install communications surveillance equipment, giving the NSA unfettered access to large streams of digital communications in real-time which they could then data-mine and analyse. If the government need information on a person, they will be able to collect vast amounts of it from their database, and analyse everything that person has done in the previous years. Everything from their emails to their browsing history will be in the hands of the government.
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The first necessary step is for a revised ECPA to provide the most basic of protections for communications over the internet. The government should have to obtain a warrant before compelling a service provider to disclose an individual’s private online communications. They should also have to get a warrant before it can track the location of an individual’s wireless communication device. Before it can install a trace device to capture real time transactional data, the government should be obliged to demonstrate to a court that such data is relevant to a criminal investigation. In other words, an outright ban on the ability of law enforcement to obtain emails through subpoenas, and holding law enforcement accountable for its actions are the minimum protections necessary.
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The first necessary step is for a revised ECPA to provide the most basic of protections for communications over the internet.

That wouldn't be a revised ECPA, it would be a new statute. That statute can't pass, because the State considers its future to reside in data-mining its population. (Every State now does.) You're not being serious.

The government should have to obtain a warrant before compelling a service provider to disclose an individual’s private online communications. They should also have to get a warrant before it can track the location of an individual’s wireless communication device. Before it can install a trace device to capture real time transactional data, the government should be obliged to demonstrate to a court that such data is relevant to a criminal investigation. In other words, an outright ban on the ability of law enforcement to obtain emails through subpoenas, and holding law enforcement accountable for its actions are the minimum protections necessary.

 In the meantime, we need to ask ourselves why we give so much information to third parties in the first place. We may not have been aware of any bargain being struck, yet services like Google are free because they can get ad data targeted to you just based on your searches. Most people are aware of this, yet choose to turn a blind eye, favouring the familiar convenience of such websites over their intrusion into our privacy. We need to start looking into safe and secure alternatives that do not carry the price of our privacy. We need to find encrypted email services, which protect our private communications from snooping eyes. \ No newline at end of file
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What "find"? Just encrypt your email. You don't need a "service." You need some free software.

See http://moglen.law.columbia.edu/wiki/CompPrivConst Look on the front page for the instructions on installing GNU Privacy Guard. Do so, put a key on the servers, and teach your correspondents how to do so as well. Done.

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ClodaghHoganSecondPaper 1 - 07 Mar 2013 - Main.ClodaghHogan
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The Expanding Surveillance State

The US government through the FBI, federal intelligence agencies, the military, state and local police and private companies, is collecting incredible amounts of personal information about American citizens. This surveillance takes place with little or no oversight by the courts, the legislature or the public. This surveillance activity is not directed solely at terrorists and criminals, but at everybody. Increasingly, the government is engaging in suspicionless surveillance that tracks sensitive information about innocent people. The lack of restrictions on the government's power to collect people's personal information puts the right to privacy and freedom of speech at risk. This situation is only exacerbated by the current trend of giving private companies so much access to the intimate details of our lives.

The idea of the Government wiretapping our phonelines and accessing our private emails would to most of us seem entirely unrealistic. Most of us presume we are not of any interest to be spied on, thus we would not be spied on, and surely the Government would need a very good reason to do so? Technically, the US government must have a warrant to wiretap US citizens However, there are many loopholes which they use in order to keep an eye on the digital lives of its citizens. By presenting a simple subpoena to companies like Google and AT&T, the authorities have instant access to your texts and emails. This may have happened to any of us already and we would never know.

One might wonder exactly how the government can access your digital data without a warrant. Getting a warrant requires showing "probable cause" of a crime. This quite high standard is required for police to listen to your phonecalls. However, to get information on the phone numbers you call and when, as well as incoming calls, police do not need a warrant, but a subpoena, which requires a significantly lower standard of evidence, that of the data being relevant to an investigation. Lesser standards are also required for cell phone location data, text messages, cloud data and emails older than 180 days. For some reason the law gives greater protection to recent emails than to older ones.

Enacted in 1986, the Electronic Communications and Privacy Act, is in dire need of modernization to reflect the new digital economy. The way we communicate using technology has massively changed in 25 years and yet the ECPA has remained exactly the same, creating a gap between the law and users’ reasonable expectations of privacy. The Senate recently took a step toward improving privacy protection for emails, by approving an update to the 1986 ECPA that requires law enforcement officials to obtain a warrant before they can read emails older than 180 days. However, at the end of December, the Senate decided, without explanation, to drop the proposed amendments, and so for the present, law enforcement officials will continue to be able to access cloud-based data with only a subpoena.

Last year, US Magistrate Judge Steven Smith examined the history behind the ECPA court orders, and was shocked to discover, not only the incredible number of emails and other inbox data obtained by the police under the ECPA, but that most people who had been surveilled under it were completely unaware. In his report he comes to the conclusion that it is reasonable to infer that far more law-abiding citizens than criminals had been tracked under the provisions of the ECPA. This emphasises the immediate necessity of enforcing a strict search warrant requirement, as well as a new level of transparency into how and why this data is collected.

The extent of the expanding surveillance state was exposed by the New York Times in 2005 in an article uncovering the NSA's domestic spying program. This program, intended to monitor communications of suspected terrorists within the US, in fact also had an impact on millions of innocent citizens, never suspected of a crime. The government has amassed, through the major telecommunications companies, a database of detailed call-records of customers (which includes customer's names, addresses and calls), without any warrants or judicial supervision. These telecommunications companies also allowed the NSA to install communications surveillance equipment, giving the NSA unfettered access to large streams of digital communications in real-time which they could then data-mine and analyse. If the government need information on a person, they will be able to collect vast amounts of it from their database, and analyse everything that person has done in the previous years. Everything from their emails to their browsing history will be in the hands of the government.

The first necessary step is for a revised ECPA to provide the most basic of protections for communications over the internet. The government should have to obtain a warrant before compelling a service provider to disclose an individual’s private online communications. They should also have to get a warrant before it can track the location of an individual’s wireless communication device. Before it can install a trace device to capture real time transactional data, the government should be obliged to demonstrate to a court that such data is relevant to a criminal investigation. In other words, an outright ban on the ability of law enforcement to obtain emails through subpoenas, and holding law enforcement accountable for its actions are the minimum protections necessary.

In the meantime, we need to ask ourselves why we give so much information to third parties in the first place. We may not have been aware of any bargain being struck, yet services like Google are free because they can get ad data targeted to you just based on your searches. Most people are aware of this, yet choose to turn a blind eye, favouring the familiar convenience of such websites over their intrusion into our privacy. We need to start looking into safe and secure alternatives that do not carry the price of our privacy. We need to find encrypted email services, which protect our private communications from snooping eyes.


Revision 3r3 - 23 Aug 2014 - 19:33:50 - EbenMoglen
Revision 2r2 - 31 Mar 2013 - 16:19:47 - EbenMoglen
Revision 1r1 - 07 Mar 2013 - 16:34:35 - ClodaghHogan
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