The FBI doesn't think it needs a warrant to read emails and other electronic communications – despite the fact that a federal court has ruled that doing so violates the Fourth Amendment. Ben Wizner appeared today on to discuss this and other ACLU revelations regarding government surveillances practices.
The ACLU this week released documents that paint a disturbing picture of the authority the government claims to access a wide range of our communications – from emails to Facebook messages and much more. These latest developments reinforce what has long been clear: it is well past time to modernize ECPA, the egregiously outdated law that governs our electronic privacy but hasn't been updated since 1986, before the World Wide Web was even invented. As Wizner said:
There's no reason why your emails should have different constitutional protections than a letter that you write. People expect when they send an email to someone that it is private, that it shouldn't be treated as some kind of business record that the government can obtain without good reason.
Wizner also discussed FBI plans to vastly increase its online surveillance capabilities by requiring that companies build in to their systems the capacity to comply with wiretap orders. Beyond the fact that "our government wasn't created to make sure that law enforcement can spy on every single communication," the cybersecurity implications of such a plan are enormous (and quite terrifying). Watch the video in full to learn more:
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The FBI isn't alone – the ACLU recently revealed the IRS also claims the authority to read your emails without a warrant. Read more about that here, and to Congress to update ECPA.
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