Google "personal history"
- From: Educational CyberPlayGround <admin@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- To: nethappenings@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Thu, 12 May 2005 14:46:47 -0400
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The Google "personal history" is basically one more example of
stored records that never used to exist.
In family law and civil suits, relevant stored records are highly
likely to be included in discovery unless the judge is convinced that
the burden (on privacy or the cost of producing the evidence) outweighs the
benefit of accurate evidence. So far in the U.S., discovery tends to
win.
As for DOJ, they love stored records. The standards under the
Stored Communication Act are much lower than the standards for a
wiretap.
What about when stored telephone calls start to happen much more
often, as is likely with VOIP?
That was the subject of a House Judiciary hearing last Thursday,
where the so-called "stored voice mail" provision in the Patriot Act,
Section 209, turns out to apply to all stored telephone calls. The
Committee was surprised to learn how easily the stored phone calls
can be seized.
NPR All Things Considered story on stored telephone calls:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=4612408
Testimony explaining Section 209:
http://www.peterswire.net/swire.house.judiciary.testimony.042105.doc
Audio recording of the entire April 21 hearing is available from the
front page of the Center for Democracy & Technology website,
www.cdt.org.
Peter
Prof. Peter P. Swire
Moritz College of Law of
The Ohio State University
John Glenn Scholar in Public Policy Research
Consultant, Morrison & Foerster, LLP
(240) 994-4142, www.peterswire.net
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