Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

SoylentNews is people

posted by n1 on Friday October 24 2014, @10:11AM   Printer-friendly
from the classified-[redacted]-[redacted]-case-dismissed-[redacted] dept.

Justice Department lawyers have asked a federal court in Pittsburgh to dismiss a sweeping lawsuit brought earlier this year by a local lawyer against President Barack Obama and other top intelligence officials.

In a new motion to dismiss filed on Monday, the government told the court that the Pittsburgh lawyer, Elliott Schuchardt, lacked standing to make a claim that his rights under the Fourth Amendment have been violated as a result of multiple ongoing surveillance programs.

Specifically, Schuchardt argued in his June 2014 complaint that both metadata and content of his Gmail, Facebook, and Dropbox accounts were compromised under the PRISM program as revealed in the documents leaked by former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden.

 
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Display Options Threshold/Breakthrough Mark All as Read Mark All as Unread
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 2) by cafebabe on Saturday October 25 2014, @09:58AM

    by cafebabe (894) on Saturday October 25 2014, @09:58AM (#109863) Journal

    And nuclear war, biological war, civil war, pestilence, plague, immigrants and cancer [soylentnews.org].

    More seriously, the general public is gaining ambivalence towards technology because exercising the precautionary principle is impractical and/or too costly for most people. Yes, a member of the public can buy cheap tickets, cheap books and cheap food with their phone. Or do whizzy things like hail a taxi. However, for the rest of the time, they know that it is a spy in their pocket. Unfortunately, complete abstinence from technology which they don't understand means less discounts and being a social pariah.

    --
    1702845791×2
    Starting Score:    1  point
    Karma-Bonus Modifier   +1  

    Total Score:   2  
  • (Score: 2) by JeanCroix on Saturday October 25 2014, @02:44PM

    by JeanCroix (573) on Saturday October 25 2014, @02:44PM (#109912)

    That does bring up a good point - there are several "solutions" to government surveillance which come to mind:

    1) Don't use trackable technology - which, as you stated, has many problems. On the face of it, this tech has a lot of useful functions, and it seems a shame that we've finally managed to achieve many things that sci-fi has dreamed of for so long, only to have it ruined by bad actors.

    2) Rely on the tech companies to keep government from tracking it. The start of this is the whole Apple encryption announcement, and the FBI crying to the courts to allow them a required back door. To me, this feels backwards. Ostensibly, the government is the entity which should be protecting its citizens from tracking. Two or three years ago, there was talk about laws to protect against tech companies using cell phones to track its customers, but now the roles have flipped. If we need private companies to protect us from our own government, then something is seriously broken. And this leads to...

    3) Make changes to the government so it does not track its citizens by default. And this is where we came into this discussion with my original post. Can we somehow make people care, and garner enough will to cause these changes? And when/if we actually do, can we ever trust that if the government says it's not surveilling all mobile devices, that it really isn't?