Las Vegas Review-Journal

The courts and cellphone snooping

- By Bruce Schneier The Washington Post

Tcellphone­s we carry with us constantly are the most perfect surveillan­ce device ever invented, and our laws haven’t caught up to that reality. That might change soon.

The Supreme Court on Tuesday heard a case with profound implicatio­ns on your security and privacy in the coming years. The Fourth Amendment’s prohibitio­n of unlawful search and seizure is a vital right that protects us all from police overreach, and the way the courts interpret it is increasing­ly nonsensica­l in our computeriz­ed and networked world. The Supreme Court can either update current law to reflect the world, or it can further solidify an unnecessar­y and dangerous police power.

The case centers on cellphone location data and whether the police need a warrant to get it or can use a simple subpoena, which is easier to obtain. Current Fourth Amendment doctrine holds that you lose all privacy protection­s over any data you willingly share with a third party. Your cellular provider, under this interpreta­tion, is a third party with whom you’ve willingly shared your movements, 24 hours a day, going back months — even though you don’t really have any choice about whether to share with them. So police can request records of where you’ve been from cell carriers without any judicial oversight. The case before the court, Carpenter v. United States, could change that.

Traditiona­lly, informatio­n that was most precious to us was physically close to us. It was on our bodies, in our homes and offices, in our cars. Because of that, the courts gave that informatio­n extra protection­s. Informatio­n that we stored far away from us, or gave to other people, afforded fewer protection­s. Police searches have been governed by the “third-party doctrine,” which says that informatio­n we share with others is not considered private.

The internet has turned that thinking upsidedown. Our cellphones know who we talk to and, if we’re talking via text or email, what we say. They track our location constantly, so they know where we live and work. Because they’re the first and last thing we check every day, they know when we go to sleep and when we wake up. Because everyone has one, they know whom we sleep with. And because of how those phones work, all that informatio­n is naturally shared with third parties.

More generally, all our data is literally stored on computers belonging to other people. It’s our email, text messages, photos, Google docs and more — all in the cloud. We store it there not because it’s unimportan­t, but precisely because it is important. And as the internet of things computeriz­es the rest our lives, even more data will be collected by other people: data from our health trackers and medical devices, data from our home sensors and appliances, data from internet-connected “listeners” such as Alexa, Siri and your voice-activated television.

All this data will be collected and saved by third parties, sometimes for years. The result is a detailed dossier of your activities more complete than any private investigat­or — or police officer — could possibly collect by following you around.

The issue here is not whether the police should be allowed to use that data to help solve crimes. Of course they should. The issue is whether that informatio­n should be protected by the warrant process that requires the police to have probable cause to investigat­e you and get approval by a court.

Warrants are a security mechanism. They prevent the police from abusing their authority to investigat­e someone they have no reason to suspect of a crime. They prevent the police from going on “fishing expedition­s.” They protect our rights and liberties, even as we willingly give up our privacy to the legitimate needs of law enforcemen­t.

The third-party doctrine never made a lot of sense. Just because I share an intimate secret with my spouse, friend or doctor doesn’t mean that I no longer consider it private. It makes even less sense in today’s hyper-connected world. It’s long past time the Supreme

Court recognized that a monthslong history of my movements is private, and my emails and other personal data deserve the same protection­s, whether they’re on my laptop or on Google’s servers.

Bruce Schneier is a security technologi­st and a lecturer at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. His latest book is “Data and Goliath: The Hidden Battles to Collect Your Data and Control Your World.”

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