
“The Constitution must take account of vast technological changes, Chief Justice Roberts wrote, noting that digital data can provide a comprehensive, detailed — and intrusive — overview of private affairs that would have been impossible to imagine not long ago.”
Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/22/us/politics/supreme-court-warrants-cell-phone-privacy.html
Related posts:
Brazil Halts Muni Market as Banks Collect $140 Mln Fees
Feds searching passenger cell phones at San Francisco airport
Bank of Japan governor nominee Kuroda sets out aggressive policy ideas
Midwestern farmers brace to lose billions in trade war
Former Denver cop Hector Paez gets 8 years for assault, kidnapping
Never throw away your tax returns
General Solicitation Ban Lifted Today - Three Things You Must Know
Women in combat: Will they have to register for the draft?
Rob McEwen Interview: On Gold Prices, Gold Miners And Bitcoin
World’s first successful uterus transplant recipient is pregnant via in vitro fertilization
Goldman's BRIC Era Ends as Fund Folds After Years of Losses
Kim Jong Un woos defectors: Come home. We won’t kill you … promise
Refined carbohydrates can trigger food cravings, study says
Britain has invaded all but 22 countries in the world
New bitcoin billing platform rolled out to marijuana dispensaries