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by rayiner
4725 days ago
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4th amendment interpretation already encompasses private computers as protected. As for servers, the law talks in terms if "private" not "not public." The examples mentioned in the 4th amendment are things that are deeply private, not just "not public." It warps any sense of "private" to say that something you share with hundreds of strangers at Google, AT&T, etc, is "private" although you ca say its "not public." |
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What is different when the whole situation is made digital? I'm not saying all digital data held by third party companies is private, of course, but surely some of it should be.
And please don't bring up encryption for the moment, that only sidesteps the issue. There is no real-world unbreakable lock. This is a discussion about search and privacy rights.