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Miguel Afonso Caetano
Miguel Afonso Caetano
@remixtures@tldr.nettime.org  ·  activity timestamp 3 days ago

"The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has a new definition of “reasonable expectation.” According to the justices, it’s no longer reasonable to assume that what you type into Google is yours to keep.

In a decision that reads like a love letter to the surveillance economy, the court ruled that police were within their rights to access a convicted rapist’s search history without a warrant. The reasoning is that everyone knows they’re being watched anyway.

The opinion, issued Tuesday, leaned on the idea that the public has already surrendered its privacy to Silicon Valley.

We obtained a copy of the ruling for you here.

“It is common knowledge that websites, internet-based applications, and internet service providers collect, and then sell, user data,” the court said, as if mass exploitation of personal information had become a civic tradition.

Because that practice is so widely known, the court concluded, users cannot reasonably expect privacy. In other words, if corporations do it first, the government gets a free pass."

https://reclaimthenet.org/pennsylvania-court-rules-no-privacy-in-google-searches

#USA #Pennsylvania #Google #Privacy #Surveillance #PoliceState

Reclaim The Net

Pennsylvania High Court Rules Police Can Access Google Searches Without Warrant

The court’s ruling suggests that using the internet now means agreeing to be searched.
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