
“On Wednesday, the supreme court will consider whether the government must obtain a warrant before accessing the rich trove of data that cellphone providers collect about cellphone users’ movements. Among scholars and campaigners, there is broad agreement that the case could yield the most consequential privacy ruling in a generation. Less appreciated is the significance of the case for rights protected by the first amendment.”
Related posts:
Bitcoin Gets a Cautious Nod From China’s Central Bank
Dulles 'brothers grim' left legacy of mischief
Contra Costa's $45 million computer health care system endangering lives, nurses say
Want to invest in Cuba? Learn how to wait
Bitcoin surges 40% after US Senate hearing
Researchers demand sealed files about JFK assassination be made public
Venezuela's Central Bank to Trade Gold with Goldman Sachs
Russian channel censored WWII series documenting ‘dark side’ of Soviet war effort
On Airbnb Rentals, California Cities Tax First and Regulate Later
Possessing a little marijuana no longer criminal in Rhode Island
Motorola’s Moto X: First Impressions
New York Financial Regulator: ‘So Be It’ If Transparency Harms Bitcoin
How the U.S. got mixed up in a fight over Kurdish oil
New US visa-free travel policy exports Homeland Security abroad
$350 million NASA project completed, then mothballed