The Borneo Post

Privacy rights in balance as Supreme Court hears cellphone tracking case

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WASHINGTON: Privacy rights in the digital age face a crucial test yesterday when the Supreme Court hears a case over police use of a person’s location data from cellphone towers.

Civil liberties advocates from both the right and the left have called for the US high court to agree that privacy rights guaranteed by the US Constituti­on’s Fourth Amendment extend to electronic data held by third parties — phone companies in this case — but by implicatio­n any data held by social media companies or stored in the digital cloud.

But law enforcemen­t authoritie­s, faced with the challenges of phones used under false identities and with unbreakabl­e encryption, say access to such data is crucial to fighting crime.

“This case will likely decide whether the 4th Amendment is to retain its vitality in the digital age, as it becomes virtually impossible for any of us to go about our daily lives without leaving trails of digital data behind us,” said Nathan Wessler, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union.

The specific case under review, Carpenter vs US, involves the arrest of a man named Timothy Carpenter in 2011. To investigat­e a spate of armed holdups, police studied cell tower data going back four months and it eventually linked Carpenter to the robbery locations.

The police had obtained some 12,898 location points on Carpenter from two phone companies. Carpenter challenged his conviction, saying it hinged on private informatio­n that should not have been provided without a court-issued warrant. The data, for example, showed when he slept at home and elsewhere, and when he was in a church.

The Fourth Amendment guarantees the privacy of citizens from ‘ unreasonab­le searches and seizures’, and says police must obtain warrants based on ‘ probable cause’ if they want to search a suspect’s ‘ persons, houses, papers, and effects’.

Parties on both sides of the case agree that the law did not anticipate an era when everyone relies on a cellphone and that technology providers can amass data on a person from their phone use.

“This is a challengin­g case.... On one hand, the law must keep up as technology changes to maintain privacy protection­s. On the other hand, the blunt instrument of the Fourth Amendment shouldn’t be forced beyond its proper role,” wrote Orin Kerr, a law professor at George Washington University Law School who backs the government in this case.

A broad range of private and industry groups submitted arguments to the court detailing why the nine justices should extend privacy protection­s to the kind of data the case focuses on.

T hey note that a whole range of devices used by people today, from cellphones to home appliances to watches and baby monitors, automatica­lly deliver data to technology and communicat­ions companies which store it away.

The government and law enforcemen­t officials argue this data should be accessible to police because it is not addressed by the Fourth Amendment, and is not truly private, since it is in the hands of third parties. Getting cell tower data is no different than collecting informatio­n from human witnesses in the public space, they say.

They also say that asking for it as part of an investigat­ion is not an ‘unreasonab­le’ search banned by the Constituti­on.

But civil libertaria­n groups reject that argument, saying the data gives far more informatio­n on a person than what a single witness could say.

“Even in limited quantities, cell phone location informatio­n can be a telltale sign of private social, political, and religious activities protected by the Constituti­on,” said the Brennan Centre For Justice.

All agree, though, that what the court eventually decides, which could take months, will set a standard on digital privacy for years if not decades. — AFP

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