all InfoSec news
Federal Court in Virginia Holds Geofence Warrant Violates Constitution
March 10, 2022, 10:32 p.m. | Jennifer Lynch
Deeplinks www.eff.org
In the first order of its kind, a federal district court has held that a warrant used to identify all devices in the area of a bank robbery, including the defendant’s, “plainly violates the rights enshrined in [the Fourth] Amendment.” The court questioned whether similar warrants could ever be constitutional.
The case is United States v. Chatrie, and addresses a controversial tool called a geofence warrant. The police issued the warrant to Google seeking information on every device …
constitution court federal legal analysis locational privacy
More from www.eff.org / Deeplinks
Meta Oversight Board’s Latest Policy Opinion a Step in the Right Direction
1 day, 18 hours ago |
www.eff.org
Speaking Freely: Robert Ssempala
1 day, 19 hours ago |
www.eff.org
Podcast Episode: About Face (Recognition)
2 days, 6 hours ago |
www.eff.org
No KOSA, No TikTok Ban | EFFector 36.4
2 days, 20 hours ago |
www.eff.org
Responding to ShotSpotter, Police Shoot at Child Lighting Fireworks
5 days, 14 hours ago |
www.eff.org
Jobs in InfoSec / Cybersecurity
Cybersecurity Skills Challenge -- Sponsored by DoD
@ Correlation One | United States
Security Operations Center (SOC) Analyst
@ GK Cybersecurity Group | Remote
Azure Security Architect
@ First Quality | Remote US - Eastern or Central Timezone
Senior Security Engineer
@ LRQA | Birmingham, GB, B37 7ES
Product Security Intern
@ Sinch | Chicago, Illinois, United States
Cyber Support Engineer
@ Darktrace | New York