by Jenna McLaughlin. "Nothing is safe, not even our trash." Civil libertarians are worried about an increasingly common form of domestic surveillance that has nothing to do with listening to your phone calls or reading your emails; it has to do with looking through your garbage. Municipalities across the United States are implementing ... MORE
Showing posts with label privacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label privacy. Show all posts
Bill Perna: Why Some Americans Hate Edward Snowden
We can no longer be in denial. Edward Snowden's actions confronts us with a vexing problem. Because of Snowden's actions we are now burdened with the knowledge and evidence that we live in a surveillance state. We are confronted with our complacency. A fundamental question begs an answer. What does it now mean to be an American? ... MORE
The FBI Wants The Key to Your Data: Is Gov't-Resistant Encryption An Intolerable Threat To Public Safety?
by Jacob Sullum. Testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee last week, FBI Director James Comey argued that data should never be transmitted or stored in a way that frustrates government snooping. Comey warned that encryption is a boon to criminals and therefore must be designed so that law enforcement agencies can decode it ... MORE
Feds Can Read Every Email You Opened Without A Warrant
by Zack Whittaker. It's no longer a surprise that the government is reading your
emails. What you might not know is that it can readily read most of your
email without a warrant. Any email or social networking message you've opened that's more than six months old can also be accessed by every law enforcement official in government
-- ... MORE
Labels:
e-mail,
government,
police state,
politics,
privacy,
probable cause,
snooping,
warrantless search
Jacob Sullum: Christie Vs. Paul On Surveillance & Security
NJ governor unconcerned about warrantless snooping. Chris Christie says Rand Paul, one of his rivals for the Republican presidential nomination, is "politicizing America's national security" by objecting to the government's indiscriminate collection of our telephone records. The New Jersey governor's puzzling charge against the Kentucky senator ... MORE
Labels:
Chris Christie,
GOP,
government,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance,
tactics
Giving Government 'Backdoor' Access To Encrypted Data Threatens Both Personal Privacy And National Security
How domestic spying makes us less safe. The "Crypto Wars" are here again, which means federal officials are doing all they can to limit the technological tools that keep our personal data secure. President Obama and leaders from the National Security Agency (NSA), FBI, and Department of Homeland Security (DHS) have been pressuring ... MORE
Labels:
encryption,
FBI,
government,
Homeland Security,
NSA,
privacy,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Andrew Napolitano: Lies The Government Is Telling You
Because the government is not us. Last week, Republicans and Democrats in Congress joined President Barack Obama in congratulating themselves for taming the National Security Agency's voracious appetite for spying. By permitting one section of the Patriot Act to expire and by replacing it with the USA Freedom Act, the federal government ... MORE
Labels:
accountability,
deception,
dishonesty,
government,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
snooping,
surveillance
Connie Mack IV: A Spirited Defense Of Liberty
Liberty has a champion. Whether you like his brand of conservatism or not — and there’s
plenty about his approach to national security and foreign policy that I
don’t like — you have to admire the principled stand that Republican Sen. Rand Paul of Kentucky took on the reauthorization of the Patriot Act. Mr. Paul
made Americans step back and take a ... MORE
Labels:
Constitution,
individual liberty,
NSA,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
Republican,
surveillance
Sheldon Richman: The USA Freedom Act Is Inscrutable Because Politicians Know Power Thrives On Complexity
Just as roaches flourish in the dark. In a democracy citizens prevent the government from abusing them by staying informed and exercising their "rights" under the system. They monitor the politicians’ and bureaucrats’ conduct, and when citizens see what they consider misbehavior, they act to stop it either by communicating ... MORE
Labels:
abuse,
government,
monitor,
NSA,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
reform,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Edward Snowden Is A Patriot And Deserves Freedom
by Jacob Weisberg. What is the responsibility of public servants who believe that the government is abusing its authority? In most cases, US law encourages them to expose wrongdoing. The Whistleblower Protection Act passed in 1989 protects “any disclosure” that an employee reasonably believes indicates the violation of laws or rules, “gross ... MORE
Labels:
Edward Snowden,
freedom,
government,
privacy,
secrecy,
snooping,
surveillance,
whistleblowers
Leaked TISA Documents Reveal Another Privacy Threat
by Emma Woolacott. Under the draft provisions of the latest trade deal to be leaked by
Wikileaks, countries could be barred from trying to control where their
citizens’ personal data is held or whether it’s accessible from outside
the country. Wikileaks has released 17 documents
relating to the Trade in Services Agreement (TISA), currently ... MORE
Labels:
data mining,
database,
government,
information,
monitor,
privacy,
snooping,
trade,
Wikileaks
Rand Paul, Ron Wyden, & The End Of The 9/11 Terror Fog
by Nick Gillespie. So provisions in The Patriot Act have expired, including some (such as section 215) that won't be renewed when Congress gets around to passing the reform legislation known as The USA Freedom Act. This is good news, even if many of the Patriot Act's controversial elements will become authorized under the replacement bill. ... MORE
Labels:
Congress,
individual liberty,
NSA,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
New Privacy App Takes A Page From NSA Technology
by Rob Lever. Before the National Security Agency began complaining about being shut out of encrypted devices, it helped develop software for secure communications that could be adapted by the private sector. That technology is hitting the public this month in the form of a smartphone application called Scrambl3 from a California startup which ... MORE
Andrew Napolitano: Saving The Fourth
The Patriot Act has a bad pedigree and an evil history. In the fearful days immediately following 9/11, the Department of Justice quickly sent draft legislation to Congress that, if enacted, would have permitted federal agents to violate their oaths to uphold the Constitution by writing their own search warrants. The draft subsequently was revealed ... MORE
Labels:
deception,
dishonesty,
freedom,
government,
NSA,
oath,
privacy,
surveillance,
warrantless search
Farai Chideya: Your Data Is Showing -- Breaches Continue To Wreak Havoc While the Government Plays Catch-Up
Government's incentive is to infiltrate, not protect. When Kansas City, Missouri, real estate appraiser Dave Markus learned he was one of about
80 million people whose personal data was exposed in the Anthem health
insurance breach discovered at the end of January, he immediately signed
up for an identity protection service. But ... MORE
Labels:
computer,
data,
database,
government,
incentives,
information,
privacy,
protection,
security
So Far, Rand Paul Is Winning His Fight: Senate Rejects USA Freedom Act & Rejects Extending NSA Collection Authority
by Scott Shackford. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) was right. The Senate did not have enough votes to pass the USA Freedom Act, the compromise law that would have restrained, but not eliminated, mass data collection by the National Security Agency (NSA). The vote was 57-42 late this evening (technically early this morning), just ... MORE
Labels:
government,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
Rand Paul,
Senate,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance,
tyranny
PCN Editorial: The Surveillance State Is Illegal
Court gives NSA thumbs down. A U.S. appeals court's ruling that the National Security Agency's metadata collection was illegal turned the spy state upside down in almost 100 pages of common sense and solid understanding of the rights Americans have under the law. It shows, once again, that both common sense and a respect for the rights ... MORE
Labels:
government,
metadata,
NSA,
Patriot Act,
privacy,
rights,
ruling,
snooping,
spying,
surveillance
Ron Hart: The Court Vindicates Edward Snowden
Who watches the watchers? “They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” -Ben Franklin, 1759. Those of us who defended Edward Snowden in his efforts to expose our government’s illegal data collection activities were vindicated last week, as was Mr. Snowden. In essence, ... MORE
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