A number of recent items related to electronic privacy, or the lack thereof, merit Grits readers' attention: What cops get from Facebook Wanna know what information Facebook will give up about you if any law enforcement agency sends them a subpoena? See here.Big Brother is a Democrat, for todayThe Obama Administration last year succeeded in authorizing a version of "Total Information Awareness" where the Bush Administration failed, the Wall Street Journal reported last month. Apparently the key was to do it behind closed doors and not to tell the press until months after the deed was done.Your cell phone may be spying on youThe government isn't the only one who can invade your privacy. This company and others are marketing software which can be covertly downloaded onto a smart phone "through an untraceable installation process that takes less than 2 minutes" that lets you "listen in on live conversations in real-time and without the risk of being detected or traced!" Even more concerning, it contains a feature that "allows you to activate the target smartphone device’s integrated microphone through an SMS command, enabling you to record the conversation taking place in the surrounding environment." In other words, it can listen to your face-to-face conversations if the phone is in the same room with you. Marketed to helicopter parents and spouses suspecting cheaters, but also to employers, the technology is both creepy and cheap.Congress sucks: Stored communications editionA quarter-century old law allows the government to access your email if it's stored on a third-party server for longer than 180 days, and during the week between Christmas and the New Year, Congress gutted provisions in its reauthorization that would have updated the law to protect privacy during the era of cloud computing. If you use Gmail or other services to store your old emails, the government can access them, content and all, with only a subpoena. FWIW, Article 18.21, Section 4 of Texas' Code of Criminal Procedure gives state and local law enforcement in Texas similar access to "stored communications" older than 180 days, tracking the federal law.
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