4th Amendment

House Passes Privacy-Preserving Bill, but Biden Blasts it
Richi Jennings | | 4th Amendment, adtech, Advertising and AdTech, Biden, Biden administration, Biden-Harris, Congress, congressional legislation, Data Broker, Data broker regulations, Data Brokers, foreign adtech, Fourth Amendment, Fourth Amendment is Not For Sale Act (FANFSA ), H.R. 4639, House of Representatives, Joe Biden, national security, national security policy, President Biden, SB Blogwatch, US Congress, White House
Are you a FANFSA fan? The White House isn’t. It says the bill “threatens national security.” ...
Security Boulevard

FBI’s Warrantless Spying on US Must Continue, Says FBI
Richi Jennings | | 4th Amendment, Democracy, FBI, FBI Director Christopher Wray, Federal Government, FISA, Fourth Amendment, government, government access, government surveillance, Government Surveillance Reform Act (GSRA), lawful surveillance, mass surveillance, nsa, police surveillance, Privacy, SB Blogwatch, Section 702, surveillance, US Constitution, US FBI, warrantless search
Privacy, schmivacy: FBI head Christopher Wray (pictured) doesn’t see what all the fuss is about. Just renew FISA section 702 already! ...
Security Boulevard

Your Personal Data Sold to US Intelligence Agencies
Richi Jennings | | 4th Amendment, Data Brokers, Director of National Intelligence, Fourth Amendment, Information Brokers, ODNI, Privacy, SB Blogwatch
What Price 4th Amendment? Warrant not needed if info bought from brokers ...
Security Boulevard

Google Gives Cops Your Search Terms – Let the Frog-Boiling Commence
Richi Jennings | | 4th Amendment, Fourth Amendment, google, law enforcement, Privacy, SB Blogwatch, search warrant
Google stands accused of agreeing to overly-broad search warrants, which might violate the Fourth Amendment ...
Security Boulevard

Supreme Court: Police Need Warrant for Mobile Location Data
BrianKrebs | | 4th Amendment, A Little Sunshine, Amy Howe, ATT, Carpenter v United States, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Jennifer Lynch, LocationSmart, SCOTUSblog.com, Securus Technologies, Sprint, T-Mobile, The Coming Storm, The New York Times, U.S. Supreme Court, verizon
The U.S. Supreme Court today ruled that the government needs to obtain a court-ordered warrant to gather location data on mobile device users. The decision is a major development for privacy rights, ...