| ▲ | digiown 4 hours ago | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
I don't think there is an expectation of privacy for things you literally post to the public, like social media. Even the government doing the scraping directly I believe would not violate the 4th amendment. The third party doctrine also basically legalizes most types of search through people's "cloud data". To have an expectation of privacy, the data needs to not be shared in the first place. I don't think tying the hands of the government is a viable solution. The sensitive data needs to not be collected in the first place via technical and social solutions, as well as legislation to impose costs on data collection. - Teaching that "the cloud is just someone else's computer" - E2EE cloud - Some way of sharing things that don't involve pushing them to the whole internet, like Signal's stories. - GDPR type legislation which allows deleting, opting out, etc | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | magicalist an hour ago | parent | next [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> The third party doctrine also basically legalizes most types of search through people's "cloud data" This isn't actually true (it varies by type of "cloud data", like content vs metadata, and the circuit you're in), and there are multiple recent carveouts (eg geofence warrants) that when the Supreme Court bothers to look at it again, suggests they don't feel it's as clear as it was decades ago. Congress can also just go ahead and any time make it clear they don't like it (see the Stored Communications Act). It's also, just to be clear, an invented doctrine, and absolutely not in the constitution like the fourth amendment is. Don't cede the principle just because it has a name. Technical and social solutions are good, but we should not tolerate our government acting as it does. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ▲ | asveikau 3 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
> I don't think there is an expectation of privacy for things you literally post to the public, like social media Neither is there an expectation that automation would slurp it up and build a database on you and everyone else. Maybe the HN crowd is one thing, but most normies would probably say it shouldn't be allowed. > Even the government doing the scraping directly I believe would not violate the 4th amendment. Every time I see someone make a statement like this I think of the Iraq war era when a Berkeley law professor said torture is legal. Simply saying something that clearly violates the spirit of our rights is ok based on a technicality, I would not call that a moral high ground. > The sensitive data needs to not be collected in the first place via technical and social solutions, At this point and points forward I think your comment is much more on the mark. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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