In a sweeping victory for privacy rights in the digital age, the Supreme Court on Wednesday unanimously ruled that the police need warrants to search the cellphones of people they arrest.While the decision will offer protection to the 12 million people arrested every year, many for minor crimes, its impact will most likely be much broader. The ruling almost certainly also applies to searches of tablet and laptop computers, and its reasoning may apply to searches of homes and businesses and of information held by third parties like phone companies.“This is a bold opinion,” said Orin S. Kerr, a law professor at George Washington University. “It is the first computer-search case, and it says we are in a new digital age. You can’t apply the old rules anymore.”
2More
2More
Accused Pirate Slams BitTorrent Tracking Outfit in Court | TorrentFreak - 1 views
2More
Advocate General Doubts Legality of Pirate Bay Blockade | TorrentFreak - 0 views
2More
BitTorrent Users are Avid, Eclectic Content Buyers, Survey Finds | TorrentFreak - 0 views
2More
Raids cast doubt on the integrity of TOR | ITworld - 1 views
3More
Technology Changes; People Don't | Baseline [# ! Note] - 0 views
1More
How to access your Google Drive account from Linux command line using Gdrive - 0 views
1More
SOPA's ugly message to the world about America and internet Innovation - Ideas@Innovati... - 0 views
1More
Get started with open source without writing any code | opensource.com - 1 views
2More
Microsoft Office whips Google Docs: It's finally game over | Computerworld Blogs - 0 views
1More
Google's Uncertain Trumpet: Why is YouTube still hidden in the search alphabet? | MUSIC... - 1 views
2More