Daily Archives: August 15, 2017

Is Freedom of Speech really free? 2 Sacramento experts explain – KCRA Sacramento

Posted: August 15, 2017 at 11:59 am

Is Freedom of Speech really free? 2 Sacramento experts explain

Updated: 11:24 PM PDT Aug 14, 2017

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WEBVTT WANT AS LONG AS WE DON'T INCITEVIOLENCE.BUT IT DOESN'T ALWAYS FREE USFROM THE FALLOUT.THIS HOT DOG RESTAURANT INBERKELEY IS STAYING BUSY AFTER ANATIONAL CONTROVERSY OVER ANEMPLOYEE, SEEN IN THIS PHOTO ATTHE CHARLOTTESVILLE RALLY.TOP DOG POSTED SIGNS SAYING COLEWHITE RESIGNED.CUSTOMERS SAY IT'S UNFAIR FORTHE RESTAURANT TO BE CRITICIZEDFOR AN EMPLOYEE EXERCISING FREESPEECH NO MATTER HOW HURTFUL TOSOME.>> WE DON'T KNOW WHAT SOMEPEOPLE WERE THINKING.YOU HIRE THEM BELIEVING WHATTHEY TELL YOU.YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT THEY'REREALLY THINKING.DANA: PEOPLE HAVE MADE DEATHTHREATS AND CALLED FOR AUNIVERSITY OF NEVADA RENOSTUDENT TO BE EXPELLED AFTERPHOTOS APPEARED OF HIM ATTENDINGTHE RALLY.>> IT WAS A HUGE TRAGEDY.I DIDN'T GO TO SEE ANYONE HURT,ESPECIALLY ANYONE KILLED.DANA: THE SCHOOL SAYS IT WON'TEXPELL PETER CVJETANOVIC, BUTHE'S WORRIED HE WON'T GET INTOLAW SCHOOL OR GET A JOB.>> THAT'S TOO BAD FOR THEMBECAUSE THE CONSTITUTION ISN'TGOING TO HELP THEM.DANA: MCGEORGE CONSTITUTIONALLAW PROFESSOR BRIAN LANDSBERGSAYS THAT'S BECAUSE THECONSTITUTION ONLY PROTECTSPEOPLE FROM GOVERNMENT ACTION,NOT PRIVATE COMPANIES.>> THERE'S SOME PROTECTIONS FORPUBLIC EMPLOYEES BUT EVEN THOSEARE SOMEWHAT LIMITED.DANA: EMPLOYEES CAN TRY TO FIGHTBACK, BUT CHANCES OFSUCCESSFULLY SUING AN EMPLOYERARE RARE.>> THE STATUTORY PROTECTIONS AREPRETTY SPARSE.DANA: AND THEN, THERE'S THECOURT OF PUBLIC OPINION ONSOCIAL MEDIA. >> WE LIVE IN A CONNECTEDSOCIETY NOW.WE CAN FIND PEOPLE LIKE THAT.DANA: THOMAS DODSON EXPLAINSFREEDOM OF SPEECH IS NOT FREEDOMFROM CONSEQUENCES.>> YOU ARE SAYING, NOT JUST TOTHE GROUP THAT IS THERE, YOU'RESAYING TO THE WORLD, THIS IS HOWI BELIEVE.THIS IS WHAT I THINK.IF YOU ASSOCIATE YOURSELF WITHAN EXTREMIST VIEW, ON ANY SIDE,YOU'RE LIKELY TO COME UNDER THEIRE OF YOUR EMPLOYER.DANA: LATER TONIGHT, WE WILLHAVE MORE QUESTIONS AND ANSWERSABOUT FREEDOM OF SPEECH ANDPROTECTIONS FOR EMPLOYEES.THAT WILL BE ON OUR KCRA 3MOBILE APP.BRIAN: WHEN ARE EMPLOYERS NOTALLOWED TO RETALIATE OR FIREYOU?

Is Freedom of Speech really free? 2 Sacramento experts explain

Updated: 11:24 PM PDT Aug 14, 2017

The events in Charlottesville have rekindled debates over free speech and the unintended consequences that come with it.

KCRA 3s Dana Griffin sat down with two experts to talk about the Freedom of Speech and how it works.

Thomas Dodson is co-founder of Above the Fray, a social media awareness organization that empowers safe and responsible social media users.

Brian Landsberg is a Constitutional law professor with the McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento.

Get the full story in the video above.

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Opinion Journal: Free Speech in Charlottesville – Wall Street Journal – Wall Street Journal (subscription)

Posted: at 11:59 am

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Q&A: Experts break down Freedom of Speech, what it means – KCRA Sacramento

Posted: at 11:58 am

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (KCRA)

The events in Charlottesville have rekindled debates over free speech and the unintended consequences that come with it.

Viral photos from the rally show men holding tiki torches and marching on the University of Virginia campus as they protest the removal of a Confederate monument.

In many of those photos, the men are clearly identifiable and through social media were named. In two particular instances, a University of Nevada - Reno student is facing backlash at school and a Berkeley man lost his job at the restaurant Top Dog.

Instagram/phedlund via CNN

KCRA 3s Dana Griffin sat down with two experts to talk about the Freedom of Speech and how it works.

Thomas Dodson is co-founder of Above the Fray, a social media awareness organization that empowers safe and responsible social media users.

KCRA

Brian Landsberg is a Constitutional law professor with the McGeorge School of Law in Sacramento.

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Q: If someone is fired from a job, does that violate their Constitutional rights?

Landsberg: If being fired by a private employer, the answer is that your rights are probably not being violated.

Dodson: The thing that most people dont think about is that freedom of speech is not freedom from consequences.

Q: What protections do people have under the First Amendment of the United States Constitution?

Landsberg: The Constitution only protects people from government action, not private companies. Theres some protections for public employees, but even those are somewhat limited.

Dodson: I can string together any number of words right now and spout them out to you and they can be as ugly and hate-filled and vile as possible. That doesnt mean Im free from the consequences from those words.

Q: Should people be fired for sharing opinions that differ from their employers?

Landsberg: Many employers just want to steer clear of politics and they dont want to be identified with political speech of their employees.

Dodson: Employers have to look at their employees when theyre going through something like this and say, "I dont want that person working at my company. I dont want that person associated with my business."

Q: Which groups are protected by the constitution?

Landsberg: The California Labor Code provides some limited protections for speech, for political-type speech. And the National Labor Relations Act provides protections for speech connected with unions.

Q: How does social media play a role in the court of public opinion?

Dodson: Everyone has a camera. Everyone has a phone. Everyone is taking pictures and shooting video.

So, when you go to an event like this, youre saying not just to the group thats there, but youre saying to the world, This is how I believe, this is what I think.

If you associate yourself with an extremist view, on any side, youre likely to come under the ire of your employer.

Q: What do you think about the UNR Student and Top Dog Restaurant employee who are facing criticism because they participated in the Charlottesville rally?

Landsberg: Thats too bad for them because the Constitution isnt going to help them.

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Enrique Valds Pliego, Atheist Republic Oaxaca City Consulate – The Good Men Project (blog)

Posted: at 11:58 am

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Scott Douglas Jacobsen:Was there a background in atheism, in thefamily?Within that family background, was there a surrounding culture that brought forth a critical mindset towards religion? If so, how? If not, why not?

Enrique Valds Pliego:Myfathers background has a religious mindset. So I lived with him my first 9 years. I was a believer then, but at the dissolution of my parents marriage, I lived with my mothers family who is scientist and agnostics. At that point, I developed my critical thinking skills. They had a library, a big area to read. I had a lot of time to read. My mothers family never took to me to participate in any religious activity, but we used to visit museums and watch movies, theatre and a lot of other activities.

Jacobsen: Through these threads of family and surrounding culture, what made for the pivotal moments in development as an atheist?

Pliego:There were a lot of pivotal moments, but some of them were like moments of revelation, when a bunch of religious ideas had not sensed, or when a religious community used to act violently against free people, I disagree with religious events where Iobliged to shut up just because if I express my self it could be dangerous. but the most important pivotal moment was understanding some concepts like freedom, opinion, law, belief, respect, persuasion, and profit.

Jacobsen: Also, a- as a prefix in atheism means many things because it is both denial and affirmation. What is affirmed there to you? What is denied to you?

Pliego:In my mind, Ithink strongly its a free theme, so theres affirmed that even God in existence, people like me will defend always our rights when some people use that freedom to believe or not believeand is denied to leave our freedom on abuse or swindler hands.

Jacobsen: How did you find the Atheist Republic? What do you do for them? What are your tasks and responsibilities?

Pliego:Ifound AR because people need to talk about common themes, protection, people with common issues. Ido community links, produce messages, questions, replicate notices, and act as a community manager. We work with freedom. Our work is free. We just have a couple of easy rules. Respectis always a base. Our responsibilityis to build a web of free people, to guarantee it, not to fight against religious people, butbuild bridges toward civilization.

Jacobsen: How does an Atheist Republic consulate work? What are its daily operations? How do you make sure the operations function smoothly?

Pliego:Each civilization, each community, city or town grow up independently, even AR. so each consulate hassimilar rules, is part of a mesh that works as a train, lot of peoplego in and go out, if they needsomething we could offer them, with out fees, just because we are real people who want to give to our time the other opportunity to future, options. each one its different, each person has rights.

Jacobsen: Why volunteer for them? What meaning comes from it?

Pliego:Whyhelp people? why build better communities? why is the sense of build civilization a struggle? why make divisions? why disrespect other with same rights? why people arrive at the moon or finding lots of advances? A lot of meanings are inside people, each one of us, but even objective things, because its function, peaceful communities, educated communities are possible, even the opposite.

Jacobsen: How does the Atheist Republic, in your own experience and in conversing with others, give back to the atheist community and provide a platform for them even to simply vent from social and political conventions that hold them either in contempt or in begrudging silence for fear of loss of life quality?

Pliego:When people grew up inside a religious world, with lots of fears, even a tiny, little, very small opportunity of freedom is a great experience, thats why we want to provide a big community for religious refugees. We do not provide disrespect, we want to achieve the common place of meeting, brainstorming, options to kids, their parents, just people who need say any thing related to religiosity, what they feel, what they need, what they lived, what they could give to the community. everybody must live freely. everybody deserves it.

Jacobsen: What do you hope for the future of atheism? What are the movements next steps?

Pliego:Not hopes, its a reality, some places, some countries, towns, who known about rights, about liberty are convinced of taking care of it. the future is related to spread of liberty, with rights, not religious issues, an atheist is not a furious stubborn, is not a politician giving recommendations, is not a leader, is just common people who love freedom as anyone who had to prove it. the next step is the common objectives, freedom anywhere, and maintenance of it. even we have a local activities calendar and sometimes a common calendar at whole consulates. You could check with the consulates, some of them have a complete project while others are building

Jacobsen: Any feelings or thoughts in conclusion?

Pliego:No one deserves disrespect, abuse, lack of freedom; everybody deserves human rights anda healthy world. obviously, we must take decisions, but this kind of decisions could have sense between human rights.

Jacobsen: Thank you for your time, Enrique.

Pliego:Good night.

Photo Credit: Getty Images

Scott Douglas Jacobsen founded In-Sight Publishing and In-Sight: Independent Interview-Based Journal. He works as an Associate Editor and Contributor for Conatus News, Editor and Contributor to The Good Men Project, a Board Member, Executive International Committee (International Research and Project Management) Member, and as the Chair of Social Media for the Almas Jiwani Foundation, Executive Administrator and Writer for Trusted Clothes, and Councillor in the Athabasca University Students Union. He contributes to the Basic Income Earth Network, The Beam, Canadian Students for Sensible Drug Policy, Check Your Head, Conatus News, Humanist Voices, The Voice Magazine, and Trusted Clothes. If you want to contact Scott: [emailprotected]; website: http://www.in-sightjournal.com; Twitter: https://twitter.com/InSight_Journal.

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The birth of atheism – Times of Malta

Posted: at 11:58 am

In his piece No afterlife (August 5), John Guillaumier seems to suffer from tunnel vision in all matters of the ultimate questions of being human. He is so convinced of his intellectual superiority he is incapable of reflecting deeply on survival after death, a subtle and complicated issue.

According to Immanuel Kant, the ultimate questions combine all the interests of human reason. What can I know? sums up the questions about truth. What I ought to do questions the norm. What may I hope questions the meaning.

One thing can be conceded to atheists of substance. It is possible to deny God, to deny the afterlife. Atheism cannot be refuted rationally. In The Christian Challenge, Hans Kung states: It is the experience of the radical uncertainty of every reality which provides atheism with sufficient grounds for maintaining that reality has absolutely no primal reason, no primal support or primal goal.

On the other hand, according to the same author, atheism is also incapable of positively excluding the other alternative: as it is possible to deny Him, so it is also possible to affirm God as the primal reason, the primal support and the primal goal of ones existence despite the ambiguities, the injustices, the contradictions of daily living. In essence, belief in God and survival after death is nourished by a substantial basic trust. This ultimate trust in God in no way isolates one from a deep commitment to others, to the environment and to all the fields of human learning.

What is needed is a genuine dialogue between believers in God and level-headed atheists. Atheism must be taken seriously, giving it its due weight to its causes and values. Believers can have more than a little to do with the birth of atheism.

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Nights Of Fire: A Conscious Evolution Festival Preview – NYSMusic

Posted: at 11:57 am

It is officially time to prepare for this years Nights Of Fire: A Conscious Evolution. Hosted by Spun Out Productions, the annual music festival kicks off on Thursday, August 17, and runs through the morning of Monday, August 21. Located at The Woods at Bear Creek, a glampingglamorous campingground in Franklinville, NY, Nights of Fire will offer its patrons an educational exploration through fire dancing, art, live music, and workshops.

As eloquently described on the Nights Of Fire Event Page:Nights Of Fire is a FIRE, Art, Music, & EDUCATIONAL RETREAT. We invite all likeminded individuals and those who seek to learn and do more to improve themselves and the world around US. NIGHTS OF FIRE is an educational retreat where YOU can come study many different forms of FIRE SPINNING, FLOW, DANCE, DRUMMING, PAINTING and much more. Evolve with us at night as we will teach you how to celebrate life and simply being alive through song and dance with live music.

Pre-sales for the festival are no longer online, however, you can pick up a $75 ticket thru a ticket rep, or grab one for $100 at the gate! The ticket includes camping and parking.

Take a peek below and click the play button. Youll find a Rochester Groovecast podcast episode. This episode is a preview of the upcoming Nights Of Fire Music Festival. During the episode, youll listen to Roots of Creation, Freekbass, The Mantras, Madam Bliss, Dixons Violin, Stereo Nest, Subsoil, Space Junk, Haewa, and Flux Capacitor. All of these artists are performing at this years Nights Of Fire Music Festival.

If you peek even farther below, youll find an episode timestamp, and Nights Of Fires daily schedule.

Enjoy!

Timestamp:00:00: Roots Of Creation- Different 04:12: Episode Introduction09:56: Roots Of Creation- Row Jimmy15:23: Freekbass- Put It In A Letter18:42: Freekbass- Milkhunt23:25: The Mantras- Here We Go29:27: The Mantras- Dirt Nap35:26: Madam Bliss Remix- Notorious BIG Dead Wrong39:15: Madam Bliss Remix- Erykah Badu On And On44:10: Dixons Violin- Ignition (Correction! Jade Dragon is the album name)!46:31: Dixons Violin- Night Spirit50:56: Stereo Nest- Gradient Peak55:03: Stereo Nest- Elder Ladder59:39: Subsoil- Joe Rogan1:03:24: Subsoil- Great Unknown1:07:34: Space Junk- Ascension1:14:31: Haewa- Chem De-Vision1:18:15: Haewa- Swampin1:23:35: Episode Closing Comments1:26:46: Flux Capacitor- Big Bad1:36:29: Flux Capacitor- Unite

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Russia’s military exercises: Could they turn into war? – CNN

Posted: at 11:56 am

As a result, this regular event receives a lot more attention than other Russian manoeuvers of similar size. Held every four years, the exercise can even develop its own mythology: Much of the Western coverage said that the 2009 exercise ended with a simulated nuclear attack on Warsaw, Poland, even though there is no evidence at all from unclassified sources to suggest this was the case.

What happens during this year's Zapad exercise is important. The United States, NATO and especially the front-line states bordering Russia will be watching closely to learn what they can about the latest Russian capabilities and military procedures.

But unlike those exercises, Zapad is not a purely Russian undertaking. It is run in cooperation with Belarus.

Belarus finds itself in the difficult position of being officially an ally of Russia's but not sharing Moscow's antagonism toward the West and wanting instead to remain neutral in the confrontation between Russia and NATO.

But at the same time, the country shares NATO's concern about the danger of inadvertent conflict in the region, and is looking for ways to avoid inflaming the situation.

Belarus is pushing for openness to the West during the exercises -- which will also help ensure that Russia does not take the opportunity to deviate from the exercise scenario to launch some kind of unfriendly action.

And Belarus is running its own program of advance briefings for NATO and Western countries on how the exercise is to run, in parallel with information that Russia is providing.

There has been little public discussion on what the "staying behind" option might actually look like. While major Russian units remaining on Belarusian territory seems a remote prospect, another possibility that has been put forward is Russian military equipment being left there without troops, as part of pre-positioning for possible future Russian military action launched against neighbors such as Lithuania or Poland, or the so-called Suwaki gap, from Belarus itself.

But this too would require cooperation and agreement from Minsk, which does not fit with Belarus' track record of resisting attempts at increasing the amount of Russian military infrastructure in the country.

At the same time, Russia has good reason at the moment to play down conflict instead of launching new military adventures. With a strong interest in rolling back sanctions imposed by the United States and Europe, Moscow could choose to act calmly to defuse anti-Russian rhetoric and undermine those who warn of the Kremlin's aggressive intent.

As a result, Russia is currently mixing threatening language designed to intimidate the West with another, contradictory message: that those who fear a Russian military threat are "hysterical," "living in the last century," and hankering for the Cold War.

With the current level of Western alarm at possible developments of the upcoming exercise, if it comes to an end with no incident, then Moscow can quite readily say, "We told you so."

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Former NSA Official: Dems’ Russia Hacking Story Likely Bogus | Fox … – Fox News Insider

Posted: at 11:55 am

'He Sat On This': Judge Nap Reacts to Reports Obama Knew Russian Meddled in 2014

Antifa Protester: Trump's Denouncement of White Supremacists 'Too Little Too Late'

Former National Security Administration Technical Director Bill Binney told Tucker Carlson he has data showing that the Democrats' narrative regarding Russia hacking the DNC and 2016 election are untrue.

Binney, a member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS), said the story spread around the mainstream media that Russia is at fault can't necessarily be proven.

He said that during a prior Chinese hack of government systems, NSA agents were able to use "trace route programs" to track the "packets" of information back to a specific building in Shanghai.

Binney said that could be the reason Democrats did not want the FBI to look at their systems- ostensibly because they may not trace back to Russia.

He said a major file that was allegedly hacked from the DNC server was 1,976 megabytes in size and was transmitted in only 87 seconds.

"You made the point that it was moved too fast [that it] couldn't have gone out over the internet," Tucker Carlson surmised.

Binney said it likely was instead transmitted to a storage device.

"Many people are emotionally tied to this agenda, to tie the Russians to President Trump," Binney said.

He said that VIPS is nonpartisan and "tries to look at... the facts."

Watch more above.

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Fourth Amendment protects against warrantless seizure of cellphone location records, amicus brief argues – Reporters Committee for Freedom of the…

Posted: at 11:53 am

Press Release | August 14, 2017

Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and a coalition of 19 other media organizations support requiring the government to obtain warrants for access to cellphone location records

The government should not be able to obtain cellphone location records without first getting a warrant, said Bruce Brown, executive director of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press. The current ruling makes it too easy for the government to track a persons every move through their cellphone, which is especially worrisome if the location records in question belong to a journalist. This endangers journalists ability to gather information and keep the public informed without the risk of being easily and routinely surveilled.

The coalition brief argues that cellphone location records paint an intimate and comprehensive picture of where individuals go, and thus the people and places they associate with.

According to the brief, a journalists cellphone location data can disclose particularly sensitive details about the journalistic process: It can reveal the stories a journalist is working on before they are published, where a journalist went to gather information for those stories, and the identity of a journalists sourcesExposure of sources and journalistic methods can put sources jobs and lives at risk, compromise the integrity of the newsgathering process, and have a chilling effect on reporting.

The brief also argues that if the government can easily and routinely access detailed information about a persons movements without a warrant, it threatens the ability to freely engage in activities protected by the First Amendment like newsgathering, which now often relies on use of a cellphone.

Cellphones have become a mobile newsroom and a necessary newsgathering tool for journalists. Unfortunately, theres no way to use a cellphone without sharing some location data with a service provider, said Brown. Allowing the government to easily access cellphone location records that paint a picture of where a journalist goes and possibly even who they meet with chills reporter-source relationships, threatens newsgathering, and ultimately harms the flow of information to the public.

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How Private is Your Cellphone? The Next Fourth Amendment Challenge – Crime Report (subscription)

Posted: at 11:53 am

Most people know that very little they do on the web is private. The terabytes of data held online contain personal information accessible not only to friends, relatives and would-be employers, but to private businesses, which frequently collect user information in order to deliver better services to customers.

Can the government see it too?

In 1979, the Supreme Court ruled in Smith v. Marylandthat Fourth Amendment protections against warrantless searches do not cover such third party access to online data. In what has since been developed as the Third Party Doctrine, the court ruled that an individual has no legitimate expectation of privacy for information voluntarily given to athird partybe it a person, bank, or phone carrierinformation that is also then similarly available to government agencies.

But what are government agencies, such as law enforcement, constitutionally permitted to do with the data they collect? A case before the Court next month may help answer the question.

Carpenter v. United States has the potential to affect application of the Fourth Amendments Third Party Doctrine in the digital age.

The case involves a string of robberies, allegedly organized by the defendant, Timothy Carpenter, which occurred over a two-year period. Police acquired cell site location information (CSLI) associated with the phone he used. Although no search warrant was ever obtained, a judge did sign a court order under the Stored Communications Act, a statute that requires reasonable suspicion, not probable cause.

The CSLI records revealed Carpenters location and movements over 127 days and showed that during the five-month period his phone was in communication with cell towers near the crime scenes.

Although there is a tendency to read Smith v. Maryland as a blanket rule, where anything given to or accessed by a third party has no Fourth Amendment interest, it doesnt make sense to apply a doctrine created over 30 years ago to types of communications and data that were neither used at the time nor contemplated by the Court.

Deanna Paul

Given how much [of] our data goes through third parties, if you take a strong reading of the Doctrine, it essentially wipes out Fourth Amendment protections for most modern communications, Michael Price, Senior Counsel for the Liberty and National Security Program at New York Universitys Brennan Center for Justice, told me.

There is also nothing about location information in Smith. To rely on it, and say that location information should be accessible without a warrant, is reading the case far too broadly.

Prices point is an important one.

To analogize cases is to suggest they should be treated the same under the law and receive the same level of protection. Although the facts may specifically involve cell-site information, Carpenter is about more than just location privacy. Here, as is increasingly the case with Internet-of-Things-based prosecutions, a third-party server already had access to the sought after location data.

Carpenter presents the first chance for the Court to reconsider Fourth Amendment protections against warrantless searches and seizures of information generated and collected by the many modern technologies we use every day.

This is an opportunity at least one Supreme Court Justice has recognized.

In 2012, the Court resolved the issue of location privacy in United States v. Jones, holding that installation of a Global Positioning System (GPS) tracking device on a vehicle and using it to monitor the vehicles movements constitutes a search under the Fourth Amendment. In her concurrence, Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote that the current approach to these cases is ill-suited to the digital age, in which people reveal a great deal of information about themselves to third parties in the course of carrying out mundane tasks

She suggested it may need to be rethought in the future.

There are signs from recent cases, like Jones, that the Justices are aware of the importance of technology in contemporary life. They appear to recognize that technology is significantly different today than it was ten years ago, let alone when the Court was deciding cases like Smith.

Riley v. California was the first time the Supreme Court identified the central role that cellphones have in todays society, holding that police need a warrant to search a smart phone belonging to a person who has been arrested. Writing for the majority in 2014, Chief Justice John Roberts said that cell phones have such a pervasive and insistent part of daily life that the proverbial visitor from Mars might conclude they were an important feature of human anatomy.

The Riley Court went on to say that cellular phones have become essential to freedom of speech and First Amendment rights and, due to the volume and personal nature of the information that can be stored on a cellphone, the data should be presumptively protected by the First Amendment. The decision notes that a cell phone can double as a diary, camera, calendar, or newspaper, which makes the search of one fundamentally different from a physical search or even a search of business records.

This is an important decision, in terms of First Amendment protections, showcasing the Supreme Courts comfort with new technology and that it is cognizant of the impact of digital information, said Andrew Ferguson of the David A. Clarke School of Law at the University of District Columbia, and a national expert on predictive policing and the Fourth Amendment,

See also:Digital Privacy Rights of Probationers

Similarly, earlier this year, the Court decided Packingham v. North Carolina, which addressed the prevalence and necessity of the internet and social media in a digitized society.

Riley embodies the idea that new technologies and the digital space are different, yet fails to view these devices for what they are rather than what theyre most similar to. A cell phone is not a diary, calendar or any of the technologies cited by by the Court, and to draw a series of slightly-off-the-mark analogies and suggesting they should be treated the same, is not a solution.

In reviewing Carpenter, there are only a few scenarios for the Courteach of which will have lasting implications.

The Court might opt to temporarily put tape over the problem, hiding behind the Third Party Doctrine and wait for the next case to make its way up.

Or it could limit the Doctrines application to CSLI and recognize that carrying a cellular phone does not, in and of itself, amount to consenting to location tracking.

One of the difficulties the Court is confronted with is that the Doctrine, as its been created, doesnt offer a nice neat answer, said Ferguson. The Court may have to rethink their traditional approach to the Fourth Amendment in order to address this new technological threat to privacy and security.

The other difficulty is: If Carpenter is really about the future of the Third Party Doctrine, it is about far more than just cell site recordsit is about the future of a data-driven third party mediated age.

That is a huge question to answer. And, due to the far-reaching consequences any of the scenarios the Court may chose, the Court may also just decide to punt it to a future case.

There are few things we do online that arent connected, in some way, to a third party. As smartphone technology continues to advance, more and more aspects of our lives will be recorded and stored on third-party servers. Lower courts across the country are only just beginning to consider how the Internet of Things will affect our expectations of privacy.

Carpenter is an opportunity for the Supreme Court to reconceive how privacy and security values can be protected in an era of increasingly sophisticated surveillance technologies that allow us to remotely control the lights and heat in our homes or monitor intruders.

Lets hope the Justices take it.

Deanna Paul (@thedeannapaul) is a former New York City prosecutor and adjunct professor of trial advocacy at Fordham University School of Law. This fall she will begin attending Columbia Universitys graduate school of journalism. Her nonfiction work has been published by The Marshall Project, Rolling Stone, and WIRED.

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How Private is Your Cellphone? The Next Fourth Amendment Challenge - Crime Report (subscription)

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