Daily Archives: March 6, 2015

Youtube For Kids, Dark Age Digital, NSA, Facebook Zero – DOZA iT 24.02.2015 – Video

Posted: March 6, 2015 at 9:51 pm


Youtube For Kids, Dark Age Digital, NSA, Facebook Zero - DOZA iT 24.02.2015
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Youtube For Kids, Dark Age Digital, NSA, Facebook Zero - DOZA iT 24.02.2015 - Video

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What’s New Now: Details of U.S.-Iran Cyberwarfare Revealed in NSA Document – Video

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What #39;s New Now: Details of U.S.-Iran Cyberwarfare Revealed in NSA Document
Cyberwarfare between the U.S. and Iran has been accelerating at an alarming rate since 2012, two years after the discovery of Stuxnet, according to a recentl...

By: PCMag

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What's New Now: Details of U.S.-Iran Cyberwarfare Revealed in NSA Document - Video

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Gemalto: NSA Hack Didn’t Include Mass SIM Key Theft: Tech News Today 1203 – Video

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Gemalto: NSA Hack Didn #39;t Include Mass SIM Key Theft: Tech News Today 1203
We reported to you Friday about the NSA and GCHQ #39;s ability to monitor much of the world #39;s mobile phone activity by hacking SIM cards from a European company called Gemalto, which makes about...

By: TWiT Netcast Network

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Gemalto: NSA Hack Didn't Include Mass SIM Key Theft: Tech News Today 1203 - Video

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NSA Whistleblowers William Binney and J. Kirk Wiebe – Video

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NSA Whistleblowers William Binney and J. Kirk Wiebe
NSA Whistleblowers William Binney and J. Kirk Wiebe talk about what they did in and post NSA and why, lost privacy and security, the Constitution-be-damned p...

By: All About Money

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NSA Whistleblowers William Binney and J. Kirk Wiebe - Video

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SMA 2015: Dabu Fantastic werden von der NSA (Anthony) kontrolliert. – Video

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SMA 2015: Dabu Fantastic werden von der NSA (Anthony) kontrolliert.
Anthony ist bei den Swiss Music Awards 2015 nicht nur fr joiz unterwegs. Nein er befindet sich auch in geheimer Mission fr die NSA und kontrolliert den SMS...

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SMA 2015: Dabu Fantastic werden von der NSA (Anthony) kontrolliert. - Video

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USA: Multiple shots fired at NSA building in Fort Meade – Video

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USA: Multiple shots fired at NSA building in Fort Meade
Multiple gunshots are reported to have hit a National Security Agency (NSA) building in Fort Meade, Maryland, Tuesday. No casualties or injures have been rep...

By: RuptlyTV

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USA: Multiple shots fired at NSA building in Fort Meade - Video

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Bill of Rights in Action: Due Process of Law – 1971 Educational Film – S88TV1 – Video

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Bill of Rights in Action: Due Process of Law - 1971 Educational Film - S88TV1
An open-ended film in which lawyers present their arguments concerning the due process of law clause of the fifth amendment during a hearing to reinstate a s...

By: Tomorrow Always Comes

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Bill of Rights in Action: Due Process of Law - 1971 Educational Film - S88TV1 - Video

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Argument analysis: How does requiring a warrant interfere with surprise police searches of hotel guest registers?

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The first case argued Tuesday morning, City of Los Angeles v. Patel, was about whether a Los Angeles ordinance that requires motel operators to allow the police to examine hotel guest registers, without seeking a warrant first, is constitutional. The en banc Ninth Circuit ruled that is is not, because the ordinance lacks an essential procedural safeguard pre-compliance judicial review. Prior to argument, many observers thought this meant that some judicial administrative warrant process was required. But now, after reviewing the argument transcript, confusion regarding exactly what the plaintiffs are seeking, as expressed by more than one Justice, may lead to reversal and remand rather than a substantive Fourth Amendment ruling.

Background

Recall from the preview that a group of motel owners sued Los Angeles, seeking to invalidate a municipal ordinance that requires them to make information about guests that they are required by law to record, available to any [LAPD] officer for inspection at a time and in a manner that minimizes any interference with the operation of the business. But no trial or evidentiary hearing was ever held; instead, the parties stipulated to a few facts and then agreed that the sole issue remaining was a facial constitutional challenge to the ordinance.

One stipulation was that, under the law in question, the motel operators have been subject and continue to be subject to searches and seizures of their motel registration records by the [LAPD] without consent or warrant. The Ninth Circuit ultimately ruled that this without a warrant stipulation rendered the law unconstitutional under the Fourth Amendment.

In its petition for certiorari, Los Angeles presented what amounts to three questions: (1) whether facial challenges to ordinances and statutes are ever permissible under the Fourth Amendment; (2) whether a hotel has an expectation of privacy under the Fourth Amendment in a hotel guest registry; and, if so, (3) whether the ordinance is unconstitutional because it does not require a warrant or other pre-compliance judicial review. Whether the Court should answer all of these questions, or whether the first one is instead dispositive, seemed to be a primary focus of oral argument yesterday.

Tuesdays oral argument and expectations of privacy

Observers, including this observer, sometimes forget how much close attention the Justices pay to the questions presented. At Tuesdays argument, Joshua Rosenkranz (arguing on behalf of the city) went immediately to the third question that is, the substantive constitutionality of the ordinance in question. The parties (and the Ninth Circuit) appeared to consider the second question to be moot, because they agreed by the time of argument that motel operators do have some limited expectation of privacy in their registers. But Justice Anthony Kennedy appeared to still be concerned: If a member of this Court sits down to write the opinion, does he or she have to use the phrase reasonable expectation of privacy, or do we just forget [it]? Then referencing prior administrative search cases, he asked whether the phrase closely regulated is another way to talk about reasonable expectation of privacy?

Both Rosenkranz and Deputy Solicitor General Michael Dreeben (arguing on behalf of the federal government in support of Los Angeles) quickly picked up on the point: noting that the ordinance has been on the books for many years, Rosenkranz argued that no one goes into the hotel business unaware that their registers will be inspected. Dreeben later chose to begin his argument by proposing a much narrower basis: the ordinance involves an entry only into the public lobby area of a motel. Although Chief Justice John Roberts and Justice Sonia Sotomayor quickly took issue with Dreebens suggestion, the second question (whether there is a reasonable expectation of privacy and, if so, how that affects the case) does not appear to be dead.

The substantive merits: The warrant requirement argument appears to be obscured.

With only twenty minutes (because the city was sharing its time with the federal government), Rosenkranzs opening argument otherwise focused entirely on the merits of the ordinance; the facial challenge aspect of the case was not raised until Dreeben stood up. Rosenkranz began by dramatically asserting that this case is about whether to deprive cities of one of the most effective tools they have to deter human trafficking and other short-term criminal activity in motels. He argued that it is necessary to allow frequent, unannounced spot inspections in real time without notice.

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Argument analysis: How does requiring a warrant interfere with surprise police searches of hotel guest registers?

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Second Amendment Shooting and Sport – Video

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Second Amendment Shooting and Sport
http://www.dexknows.com/business_profiles/second_amendment_shooting_and_sport-b3392352 Second Amendment Shooting and Sport is your Northern Florida headquarters for firearms, ...

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Second Amendment Shooting and Sport - Video

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First Amendment Week PROMO – Video

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First Amendment Week PROMO
The First Amendment of the Constitution states, "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech,...

By: TheCalifornianPineapple

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First Amendment Week PROMO - Video

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