PFA: home computers have no "reasonable expectation of privacy"

Keith Smith techlists at phpcoderusa.com
Tue Jul 12 18:41:11 MST 2016


I read it to be akin to not locking your front door so when the cops 
come a calling they are legally able to walk in and search.  Not so 
today.  The 4th Amendment still protects you from that (you leaving your 
door unlocked).

They were talking about a computer.  Used to be your rights stopped at 
my nose (computer).

As time passes and the courts allow more violations of the U.S. 
Constitution we will have no rights.

Last week should have been a wake up call as to how far things have 
degraded.




On 2016-07-12 00:25, David Schwartz wrote:
> It would appear that the defendant in this case is basically arguing
> Heisenburg’s Uncertainty Principle is at play, in that the use of a
> trojan to identify and spy on his machine may have resulted in the
> files they found there to have come from unspecified sources, just
> because the trojan was put there to look around. And the defendant is
> claiming this has an inherintly indefensible flaw regarding “chain
> of custody” of the data that was collected from the trojan.
> 
> It’s kinda like saying that undercover agents in a drug ring cannot
> be trusted simply because they were able to con the drug ring’s
> leaders into trusting them, and therefore cannot be trusted by
> anybody.
> 
> What they did could actually be accomplished with retargeting pixels /
> cookies and a little bit of snooping through the defendant’s browser
> history. It might take a little longer, but the evidence would
> probably be stronger that way … they’d basically be
> “triangulating” the computer from multiple sources based on known
> “salt” cookies (retargeting pixels) that show up passively based
> on browsing activities.
> 
> But I also believe the term “online privacy” is an oxymoron,
> encryption not withstanding. Use the interwebs at your own risk.
> 
> -David Schwartz
> 
>> On Jul 10, 2016, at 11:14 PM, Tom Roche <Tom_Roche at pobox.com> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> Apologies to those who've already seen this, but it was news to me:
>> 
>> Last month (Jun 2016), federal district judge Henry Coke Morgan,
>> Jr[1] ruled that the Fourth Amendment[2] does not protect home
>> computers. A criminal defendant has no reasonable expectation of
>> privacy regarding an in-home personal computer, and the federal
>> government does not need a warrant to hack one.[3] Particularly, "a
>> computer afforded Fourth Amendment protection in other circumstances
>> is not protected from Government actors who take advantage of an
>> easily broken system"[4] to implant malware. The full decision is in
>> this scanned PDF[5].
>> 
>> Gotta start hardening, Tom Roche <Tom_Roche at pobox.com>
>> 
>> [1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Coke_Morgan,_Jr [1]. [2]:
>> 
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution
>> [2] [3]:
>> 
> https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2016/06/federal-court-fourth-amendment-does-not-protect-your-home-computer
>> [3] [4]:
>> 
> http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2016/06/fbis-use-of-tor-exploit-is-like-peering-through-broken-blinds/
>> [4] [5]:
>> https://www.eff.org/files/2016/06/23/matish_suppression_edva.pdf [5]
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-- 
Keith Smith


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