When can the government read your email or monitor your web surfing?
When can the police search your phone or copy your computer files? In
the United States, the answers come from the Fourth Amendment to the
Constitution and its ban on 'unreasonable searches and seizures.' _The
Digital Fourth Amendment: Privacy and Policing in Our Online World_
takes the reader inside the legal world of how courts are interpreting
the Fourth Amendment in the digital age. Computers, smartphones, and
the Internet have transformed criminal investigations, and even a
routine crime is likely to lead to digital evidence. But courts are
struggling to apply old Fourth Amendment concepts to the new digital
world. Mechanically applying old rules from physical investigations
doesn't make sense, as it often leads to dramatic expansions of
government power just based on coincidences of computer design.
Written by a prominent law professor whose scholarship has often been
relied on by courts in the field, _The Digital Fourth Amendment _shows
how judges must craft new rules for the new world of digital evidence.
It explains the challenges courts confront as they translate old
protections to a new technological world, bringing the reader up to
date on the latest cases and rulings. Informed by legal history and
the latest technology, this book gives courts a blueprint for legal
change with clear rules for courts to adopt to restore our
constitutional rights in the computer age.
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Privacy and Policing in Our Online World
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780190627096
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter