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In reply to the discussion: Can someone confirm for me that the 4th Amendment even applies? [View all]Orrex
(67,115 posts)17. Depends on the contract, I should think
It comes down to "expectation of privacy", and frankly I believe people should have an expectation of privacy when they are paying a service company for handling their affairs, including a telephone company.
But if one's contract with the phone company includes a clause that enables that company to subject user data to periodic review, then that seems to trump the "expectation of privacy" in a pretty straightforward way.
I find it unnerving how many people hereabouts are eager to try to justify this rather than demanding accountability and privacy..guess the whole bush terrorist threat nonsense has finally become truth for some..you know what they say, 'repeat a lie enough and it will become truth', eh?
Don't mistake me. I'm not arguing for Total Information Awareness; I'm simply saying that the arguments I've heard so far about 4th amendment violations have not been convincing, especially when someone simply posts the text of the 4th amendment as some sort of snarky GOTCHA! rejoinder.
The privacy issue is more complex that that IMO, just as the right to keep & bear arms isn't as simple as it was 200+ years ago, either.
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And if your security cameras lead to a third party security firm, can they give your video feed
dkf
Jun 2013
#3
I don't know that private/public is what matters: I'm asking someone else to route my call
Recursion
Jun 2013
#6
As a systems administrator I've always thought routing data belonged to me, not the user
Recursion
Jun 2013
#5
That actually has some pretty big implications if it's the users': we make retain/delete decisions
Recursion
Jun 2013
#12
Verizon has no right to record your phone calls, no matter what contract they have you sign.
reformist2
Jun 2013
#10
There are laws that specifically govern what common carriers can/cannot do with respect to privacy
FarCenter
Jun 2013
#36
That's a good question, it is a lot more complex than people are making it out to be
treestar
Jun 2013
#14
How does data owned by a telecom provider qualify as my personal effects and papers?
Orrex
Jun 2013
#41
Even this is constitutionally dubious -- and we both know this is not the limits they are setting.
Demo_Chris
Jun 2013
#51
No, its not Constitutionally dubious. All existing case law says it is Constitutional
stevenleser
Jun 2013
#53
The change is that they now claim a single nonspecific warrant covers all...
Demo_Chris
Jun 2013
#50
No, you are wrong on all counts. Every appeals court decision on the subject, and there are many
stevenleser
Jun 2013
#52
The President has the absolute right to surveillance in national security situations/purposes
stevenleser
Jun 2013
#42