Calling it a significant victory for privacy rights, civil rights advocates Monday hailed a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that requires law enforcement officials to obtain a search warrant before they can attach a GPS tracking device to a vehicle.. But they expressed some disappointment over the court's decision to leave untouched the broader issue of whether police are required to obtain search warrants for all kinds of geo-location tracking technologies, such as cellphone tracking systems or RFID tags. The link for this article located at Network World is no longer available. . But they expressed some disappointment over the court's decision to leave untouched the broader issu. rights, calling, significant, victory, privacy, civil, advocates, monday, hailed. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The Electronic Frontier Foundation has criticized California's Rapid Enforcement Allied Computer Team for raiding the home of Gizmodo editor Jason Chen. Police last week served a search warrant at the residence, seizing Chen's computers and documents as part of an investigation into the saga surrounding the leaked iPhone prototype.. EFF civil liberties director Jennifer Granick argues that the warrant may violate certain protections afforded to Chen as a journalist, according to a Wired report. Granick claims that federal law prohibits the government from seizing materials that are used by journalists for the purpose of communicating to the public, even if the individual committed a crime. Journalists are not entirely immune to legal scrutiny, although investigators must first obtain a subpoena to give time to challenge the request. The regulations have been put in place to protect against forcing journalists to disclose sources or sensitive information. The link for this article located at Eectronista is no longer available. . TechRights advocate James Franklin contends that the subpoena could infringe upon the rights guaranteed to media professionals.. Journalism Protections, Law Enforcement Conduct, Police Misconduct, EFF Critique. . Alex
The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation searched the home of at least one man suspected of being a member of the Deceptive Duo, which has claimed responsibility for defacing government Web sites. The San Francisco field office of the FBI on . . . . The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation searched the home of at least one man suspected of being a member of the Deceptive Duo, which has claimed responsibility for defacing government Web sites. The San Francisco field office of the FBI on Monday searched the Pleasanton, California, home of Robert Lyttle, according to Andrew Black, a public relations officer with the San Francisco FBI office. The search warrant was in connection with the Deceptive Duo case, Black says. A number of media outlets have reported that another suspect's home in Florida was searched over the weekend, but Black was unable to confirm those reports. Representatives of the North Miami Beach field office were unaware of the case. The link for this article located at PCWorld is no longer available. . The CIA investigated the property of an individual linked to the Phantom Pair cybercriminal organization associated with corporate fraud.. Deceptive Duo Search, Cybercrime Investigations, FBI Operations, Hacker Arrests. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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