“It may seem unnerving that information contained inside the body — as opposed to kept in the home or worn on the wrist — could be used in a criminal investigation. But courts have yet to distinguish between data interior to the body and data stored on the outside. Data isn’t considered more protected or more private by virtue of its personal nature or where it is stored.”
Read more: https://www.wired.com/story/your-own-pacemaker-can-now-testify-against-you-in-court/
Related posts:
The Future of Money - Trace Mayer at Inside Bitcoins 2013 Las Vegas
Parents from faith-healing church charged in diabetes death of daughter
Michigan Governor Declares Emergency in Detroit; Grabs Power from Locals
Norway's Biggest Bank Demands Cash Ban
In One Month, Everyone In Iceland Will Own Cryptocurrency
Justin Raimondo: The Mossad Caucus Exposed
Terror Defendant Challenges Evidence Gathered by NSA Spying
The Michael Hastings Wreck: Video Evidence Only Deepens The Mystery
End Civil Asset Forfeiture
Dutch Streets Adopt Cryptocurrency, Become ‘Bitcoin Boulevard’
Syracuse’s ‘most prolific sex offender’ lied to acquire government job
Inside X, the Moonshot Factory Racing to Build the Next Google
Gerald Celente on Marijuana Legalization and OccupyPeace
Israel Kirzner on Ethics and Entrepreneurship
James Clapper Says Feds Will Start Releasing Some FISA And NSL Metadata