Technology, Law Enforcement | featured news

Senate panel backs e-mail privacy bill

A Senate committee approved a measure Thursday that would require law enforcement agencies to obtain a court-approved search warrant before reviewing any e-mail or other electronic content. The measure would close what privacy advocates describe as a loophole in the law in which Internet service providers such as Yahoo and Google may turn over e-mail older than six months if authorities obtain a subpoena, which does not require a judge’s approval.

 

Mobile Phone Surveillance Out of Control: Cops Collected 1.3 Million Customer Records

Mobile Surveillance

Federal, state, and local law enforcement requested about 1.3 million cell phone records from wireless carriers in 2011. It's the first time cell phone carriers have reported on the staggering surveillance numbers. Millions of innocent Americans are having their privacy invaded via the dragnet requests.

 

Google Hands Over User Data For 94% Of Law Enforcement Requests

Google Hands Over User Data For 94% Of Law Enforcement Requests

When law enforcement comes looking for evidence hidden in your Google search history, Gmail or the uncountable other Google services that touch many Internet users’ lives, don’t expect Google to turn the investigators away. In 19 out of 20 cases in the second half of last year, the company handed over at least some of the data the government demanded.

 

How the C.I.A. Perfects its Social Media Monitoring Technologies

It’s not a secret to most Netizens that they’re being watched on the Internet. And not just by advertisers. Law enforcement hasn’t exactly been secretive about the open source data-mining being done online.

 

Law Enforcement Wants To Be Able To 'Tap' Skype, Facebook and BlackBerry Emails

Law Enforcement Wants To Be Able To 'Tap' Skype, Facebook and BlackBerry Emails

It appears that law enforcement officers are finding it too difficult to track the Facebook messages.

Senh: That opens up a lot of privacy issues and could easily be abused.

 

Subscribe to this RSS topic: Syndicate content