Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by alexasmyths 3202 days ago
"A) No we aren't. Unjust laws should be fought. "

In the court system, not by disobeying.

Your view of 'what is unjust' is likely completely different from the view of others.

Particularly in this case, I don't have any problem with Google or FB handing over data for individuals under investigation, wherein a Judge had provided a warrant. This is 'legal' in every sense of the term and has been for some time.

As for 'mass surveillance' - well, this was a murkier area, and has been cleared up by the Supreme Court, and I don't suspect they are doing it.

If Google does not want to hand over data to officials producing warrants, they can take it up in court, and try to get an injunction against the process of handing over. If a judge feels there is merit to the case, they will grant the injunction while the case is being resolved.

"They could organize it so that even when the law comes asking, they can't comply, but they don't."

Nope. They can organize all they want, but if the Government is well within legal limits, Google et. al. would face some serious pain. Again for 'mass surveillance' stuff (i.e. legal ambiguity a few years ago), they'd have some legal footing to fight (i.e. try for injunctions), but for other things, not so much.

2 comments

> In the court system, not by disobeying.

Which cannot be done, when any issues with these laws are discussed in "secret courts" [0], and where the individuals involved cannot reach out to experts in the field, because their hands are tied by gag orders.

The strength of the warrant becomes less when you recognise that FISA approves almost every request it gets. The warrant is little more than a proforma.

The structure of the current laws prevents a lawful answer to the situation.

I can't advocate breaking the law, that would be going against myself.

But neither can I advocate for the law, here, because it is failing to protect the people of the nation, from the power of the nation.

[0] http://edition.cnn.com/2017/03/08/politics/fisa-court-explai...

The article you cited shows there is rather heavy oversight, and at a very high level.

And that only about 1500 FISA requests are granted a year, which is a very small number for 300 M people, relating to another 7 Billion.

A single case might yield 5 or 10 warrants, ergo, possibly as few as 150 serious cases.

That's small.

That 'they are almost always granted' is not so bad in and of itself. If there's a 'known process' for getting warrants, and law enforcement knows what will be approved and what won't - well - then there shouldn't be too many that are denied.

Underlying the 'warrant' is not something 'pro forma' - it's a set of expectations and requirements upon the part of the overview system in place. The 'form' requires that the applicant fulfills some very important criteria.

I do think it's fair to be suspicious and that we should be vigilant about it, but I don't think that 1500 requests a year is too out of line.

I think the big concern is the 'mass surveillance' - or when local cops are making requests to do local-yocal small cases that don't have relevance to things like actual terrorism.

> I do think it's fair to be suspicious and that we should be vigilant about it, but I don't think that 1500 requests a year is too out of line.

Those 1500 requests cover about 15 million people though, which skews the weighting. That gives me concern.

> If there's a 'known process' for getting warrants, and law enforcement knows what will be approved and what won't

Either that, or there is a culture that rejecting a warrant needs extenuating circumstances, in which case it becomes a large concern.

We can't know if the oversight is simply managerial, or actually effective. It's done with the utmost secrecy, with many punishments awaiting any who might speak out.

> I think the big concern is the 'mass surveillance' - or when local cops are making requests to do local-yocal small cases that don't have relevance to things like actual terrorism.

Unfortunately FISA enables mass surveillance. And the checks and balances seem heavily weighted against the individual, and in favour of a state they can't oppose.

I disagree with your view of fighting unjust laws, but I can agree to disagree on that one. It's a complicated issue for sure.

> Nope. They can organize all they want, but if the Government is well within legal limits

You are misunderstanding what I mean here: Google can make it so that nobody except the user can read their data, but Google chooses not to. If they did this (read: the correct/secure way), then the government can ask all they want, and Google would be unable to comply.