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GPS on the run?
'Net Insider=
a> By
Scott Bradner, Network World
November 15, 2011 03:43 PM ET
The Supreme Court earlier this month
heard arguments on a relatively common drug case, but there is a chance for
this case to set the groundwork, for good or ill, on re=
solving
most of the issues I discussed recently regarding the murky state of
privacy protections from the government in the United States.
The particular case argued was the =
U.S.
vs. Antoine Jones, who had been convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocai=
ne
in part on the strength of evidence collected by a GPS tracker that had been
installed on his car. The police obtained a warrant to install the tracker,=
but
had not done so within the timeframe specified by the warrant. And although=
the
government argued that people should not expect privacy when driving on a
public street, so tracking by GPS should not even require a warrant, a lower
court tossed the conviction saying that 24x7 GPS tracking went too far. The
current case is a result of the government appealing that decision.
In its argument in front of the Sup=
reme
Court, the government basically said that there should be no expectation of
privacy on the part of someone wandering around in public and that the use =
of
GPS tracking was only an implementation detail. The court had previously ru=
led
that police tracking of people in public by following them was OK without a
warrant. But it was clear from the argument
transcript that many of the justices thought that the automation of
tracking enabled by the use of a GPS tracker was more than a minor differen=
ce.
Justice Alito got to the core of the
issue when he noted "it seems to me the heart of the problem that's
presented by this case and will be presented by other cases involving new
technology is that in the pre-computer, pre-Internet age much of the privac=
y --
I would say most of the privacy -- that people enjoyed was not the result of
legal protections or constitutional protections; it was the result simply of
the difficulty of traveling around and gathering up information. But with
computers, it's now so simple to amass an enormous amount of information ab=
out people ..."
Justice Sotoma=
yor
noted that the logical conclusion of the government's position is that every
person could be monitored and tracked through their cell phones without the
trackers having to get warrants.
It seems to make little difference =
who is in charge of the government -- the official
government position is that it may do everything it can when it comes to
tracking activities and opinions of citizens. This government has argued at
various times that it should have full access on a whim to cell phone locat=
ion
data, to stored email, to IP addresses of ISP users and, in this case, the
ability to use GPS trackers on whoever it wants. The government maintains t=
hat
it can be trusted to do the right thing and not invade the citizen's rights,
but we have a few millennia of experience that counters that assertion.
If the court decides that an unlimi=
ted
ability to monitor the activities of you and me is going too far, it could =
form
the basis for an understanding of how to approach the many other situations
where the technical ability to watch has far outstripped the legal protecti=
on
against being watched. Kiss your privacy goodbye if the court agrees with t=
he
government.
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