Posts tagged with: "government-surveillance" Results 1881 - 1900 of 14,535
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28 Feb 2017, 9:55 am by Mieke Eoyang, Gary Ashcroft
    The Government Argues that Section 702 is an Important Intelligence Tool The NSA maintains that 702 surveillance “is the most significant tool in [the] NSA collection arsenal for the detection, identification, and disruption of terrorist threats to the U.S. and around the world. [read post]
15 Nov 2015, 11:57 am by Timothy Edgar
 A terrorism commission could help the French people understand what its government is doing with the considerable powers it already has. [read post]
2 May 2017, 9:40 am by dm
Hill, S.B. 34 and S.B. 741, which require government agencies to publish privacy policies for automated license plate readers and cell-site simulators respectively.California should end unconstrained police surveillance. [read post]
15 Jun 2014, 6:06 am by Frank Pasquale
What defense analysts characterize as dissent risk (or banks see as "Vox Populi Risk") can easily expand to include the very foundations of self-governance. [read post]
30 May 2017, 8:48 am by dm
During my last term as Mayor, I served as chair of the San Diego Association of Government (SANDAG) Public Safety Committee, which reviews shared law enforcement technology throughout the region. [read post]
22 Jun 2018, 2:48 pm by Shahid Buttar
 Just two years ago, the CPD was caught spying for years on peaceful local dissenters including “union members, anti-Olympics protesters, anarchists, the Occupy movement, NATO demonstrators and critics of the Chinese government. [read post]
29 Dec 2020, 9:45 am by Lindsay Oliver
Facial recognition is a biased technology, and cities have started banning government use of face surveillance because of this issue. [read post]
2 Aug 2021, 2:35 pm by rainey Reitman
In general, bills that seek to offer new government services must explain how the government will pay for those services. [read post]
21 Nov 2017, 5:36 pm by David Ruiz
According to the Senate-side USA Liberty Act, if government agents want to read Section 702-collected communications belonging to U.S. persons, they first need to obtain a warrant from the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC), which provides judicial oversight on Section 702 surveillance. [read post]
5 Dec 2019, 11:47 am by Shaw Drake
My concern is one we should all share: The continued expansion of surveillance technology at the border, under the guise of efficiency and security, signals the erosion of our privacy rights and the building of a system of government surveillance capable of intrusion in our everyday lives. [read post]
29 Dec 2020, 9:41 am by India McKinney
On March 15, 2020, Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act—a surveillance law with a rich history of government overreach and abuse—expired due to its sunset clause. [read post]
19 Oct 2015, 11:37 am by Timothy Edgar
To address this concern, one idea has been to amend the Privacy Act to allow foreign citizens the right to challenge how the US government handles their data. [read post]
8 Jan 2018, 5:21 pm by David Ruiz
The government stores those messages in several databases that—because of a loophole—can then be searched and read by government agents who do not first obtain a warrant, even when those communications are written by Americans. [read post]
16 Nov 2018, 4:00 am by Pulat Yunusov
Imagine hundreds of millions of tax filings, border crossings, purchases, sales, emails, surveillance records, court files, and highway traffic data stored, processed and retrieved every year. [read post]
16 Oct 2017, 3:35 pm by jason.kelley
Government agents can then use these results to build a case against someone, or they may simply review it without prosecution. [read post]
9 May 2015, 7:20 pm by Andrew Crocker
In legal challenges to mass surveillance, the government routinely argues that even if it is collecting the contents and/or metadata of individuals’ communications, these individuals do not have standing to challenge the government’s actions because they are not harmed by mere collection, as opposed to government search or review of the records. [read post]
7 Nov 2013, 6:03 am by Dave Maass
"It was not intended to authorize the dragnet surveillance the NSA has undertaken. [read post]
1 Jul 2015, 6:00 am by Paul Rosenzweig
In those two regimes the Germans had seen the dangers of pervasive government surveillance and they were very very reluctant to go back down that road again. [read post]
17 Mar 2020, 10:18 am by Justin Sherman
Political factors (the Zimbabwe government’s desire for advancing surveillance technology) played a role, but so too did Beijing’s priority to achieve strategic goals by means of the Belt and Road Initiative. [read post]