Seven years ago, police in Midlothian, Virginia, sought to identify a bank robber by asking Google to search the records of more than 500 million people who used the company’s ...
Explore how geofence warrants and AI-assisted searches challenge the Fourth Amendment. Can 18th-century privacy laws survive 21st-century digital surveillance?
Police Chief Keith Tarase said he did not alter the report of the drunk-driving arrest of Patrick O’Callahan, the former ...
At stake is how private your location data — and any other information you store with a large tech company — actually is.
Justices weigh whether use of a "geofence" search warrant is an unobjectionable example of smart police work or an outrageous ...
Anyone who has a cellphone and uses apps from tech companies like Google for their online calendars, maps, or email should ...
“Big Brother is watching you” is no longer a fictional admonition. Your location is recorded wherever you go — by phone ...
Okello Chatrie pulled off an armed robbery, stealing close to $200K from a bank in suburban Richmond, Virginia. And if the ...
The US Supreme Court is hearing arguments about the legality of so-called geofence warrants, sometimes also referred to as ...
How bad are sales of Tesla's cybertrucks? Nearly 20% of the vehicles went to Elon Musk's other companies, raising questions ...