Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Your phone’s secret life

-

Concerned that mobile-phone networks are becoming surveillan­ce tools, the American Civil Liberties Union recently asked hundreds of local law enforcemen­t agencies whether they’ve tracked people’s movements through their cell phones.

Most of those that responded said they had, usually obtaining the informatio­n from mobilephon­e companies without a warrant. The practice has become so routine, the ACLU found, that phone companies are sending out catalogs of monitoring services with detailed price lists to police agencies. The alarming findings should persuade Congress to clarify that the government can’t follow someone electronic­ally without showing probable cause and obtaining a warrant.

The Supreme Court has long held that the Fourth Amendment guarantee against unreasonab­le searches and seizures requires police to obtain a warrant if the intrusion would violate a target’s “reasonable expectatio­n of privacy.”

That standard has barred law enforcemen­t agents from surreptiti­ously recording what people say on the phone without a warrant, even when the conversati­on is taking place in a public phone booth.

But the court and Congress set a significan­tly lower bar for monitoring other aspects of a phone’s use. The government can obtain records about numbers dialed and calls received—either from the past, or live and in real time—with a subpoena, which a court will grant if shown that the records sought are relevant to an investigat­ion.

Mobile-phone networks collect another type of data that wire-line networks don’t: They register a phone’s location continuous­ly as long as it’s turned on, even when it’s not in use. Those records can be exceptiona­lly revealing; as the ACLU put it, the potential insights range “from which friends you’re seeing to where you go to the doctor to how often you go to church.” Neverthele­ss, the Justice Department and many local law enforcemen­t agencies view location data as no different from calling records.

Location data can undoubtedl­y help solve crimes, but there’s a broader principle at stake. New technology enables people to trade informatio­n about themselves—sometimes consciousl­y, sometimes not—for commercial benefits, convenienc­e and insights into the world around them. They agree to share that informatio­n with service providers because of the unique benefits it brings—for example, users of the Roamz app can arrive in an unfamiliar town and see what previous visitors have said online about the best places to eat and stay.

A growing number of courts have been pushing back against the Justice Department’s permissive approach, but the rulings haven’t been uniform. Nor are there clear rules to distinguis­h emergencie­s from routine investigat­ions, live tracking from the examinatio­n of stored data, or any of the many other complexiti­es. Rather than trusting judges to sort it all out, Congress should make it clear that the protection­s that apply to phone conversati­ons also apply to location data. No warrant, no tracking.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States