Privacy SOS

Kade Crockford, Author at Privacy SOS | Page 176 of 182

  • Judge says government needs warrant for cell location data

    In a decision handed down Monday in the Eastern District of New York, Judge Nicolas Garaufis sided with privacy rights advocates against the federal government's plea for warrantless access to the historical cell phone location data of a suspect in a law enforcement investigation.

    The judge argued forcefully that rapid development and expansion of mobile technology does not give the government a green light to track people's movements without a judge's permission. 

  • Won’t spy for the feds? Good luck with that.

    We've been aware for some time now of the federal government's use of immigration threats to coerce people, largely Muslims, to inform on their communities. But now we have evidence that the feds are also using their unchecked powers to punish American citizens who refuse to become government informants. 

  • Former DHS analyst decries agency inattention to right-wing terrorism

    Rania Khalek reports on an extensive Southern Povery Law Center interview with former DHS right-wing terror analyst Darryl Johnson, in which he decries the agency's shirking from its investigations against extreme right-wing fundamentalists. Not surprisingly, DHS' terrorism resources are overwhelmingly directed towards fighting Muslim extremism.

  • Police data mining firm cuts big US military deal

    Data collection, sharing and mining firm i2 runs COPLINK software, used by police throughout the nation to share and analyze information. The company just scored a 9.6 million dollar deal with the US army to do the same work for the military.

  • US Special Ops swarm Boston neighborhood elementary school in training drill

    The Jamaica Plain Gazette (Boston) is reporting that U.S. Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) teams used helicopters in drills last month at a Massachusetts elementary school. The Agassiz School, a recently-closed elementary school in the Jamaica Plain neighborhood of Boston, was the site of secretive military training, disturbing neighbors who said they weren't informed of the impending helicopters and SWAT raids. The Gazette reached out to military spokesman Kim Tiscione:

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