Tag: First Amendment
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US Supreme Court Hands Cyberstalkers a First Amendment Victory
usage, the United States Senate is mulling legislation to regulate the development of artificial intelligence, but lawmakers’ comments to …
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Security News This Week: Cyberstalkers Win First Amendment Victory in the US Supreme Court
usage, the United States Senate is mulling legislation to regulate the development of artificial intelligence, but lawmakers’ comments to …
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How to Protest Without Sacrificing Your Digital Privacy
Thousands of protesters are filling the streets of American cities to protest the police killing of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, and …
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Google has right to censor conservative nonprofit on YouTube
Just because YouTube is everywhere doesn’t make it the town square, a Seattle appeals court said on Wednesday. It’s neither a public …
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NSA Internet Surveillance Under Section 702 Violates the First Amendment
The First Amendment is too often overlooked in discussions of the National Security Agency’s vast surveillance authorities. But as …
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Judge slaps down government’s dragnet trawl of 1.3m website users
For months, the US government has played legal tug-of-war with DreamHost, the hosting company used by disruptj20.org: a site that helped …
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Supreme Court’s new term: Surveillance, hacking, sports betting—and cake, too
Enlarge / Front row from left, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Justice Anthony M. Read full news article on Technology Lab – Ars Technica
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DHS faces lawsuit over legality of forced warrantless device searches
Eleven people – including a military veteran, journalists, students, an artist, a NASA engineer, and a business owner – are suing the US Department of Homeland Security (DHS) over forced warrantless searches of their cellphones and laptops at the border. The plaintiffs are arguing that their First and Fourth Amendment rights had been violated. Read full…
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Judge scales back data demand on inauguration riot-related web host
The US government really, really wants to know about the people who planned protests on the day of Donald Trump’s inauguration as president in January. Now, after a legal tug-of-war and dialing back its demands, it won victory, though the judge’s go-ahead has shaved its demands back further still. Read full news article on Naked…
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Glassdoor pushes back against moves to identify anonymous reviewers
So, what was it like to work at [redacted entity that administers publicly funded programs]? The US Department of Justice would like to know, and it has no qualms about peeling away the anonymity of Glassdoor reviewers to find out. Read full news article on Naked Security
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