Friday, January 18, 2013

DOJ declines to reveal policy memos on GPS tracking

DOJ declines to reveal policies on legality of GPS tracking

The US Supreme Court might have ruled last year that GPS tracking is equivalent to a search, but that doesn't mean the government's practices are transparent. If anything, they may be more opaque than ever. The Department of Justice has responded to an ACLU Freedom of Information Act request for a pair of GPS tracking policy memos by providing almost completely redacted versions that, effectively, say nothing. Not surprisingly, the ACLU isn't satisfied -- it's worried that the government is playing fast and loose with definitions of where GPS tracking is usable, and when it requires a warrant under the Fourth Amendment. Whether or not the allegations are true, the civil liberty advocates are going through the courts to push for more access; we may know the truth before too long.

[Image credit: Frédéric Bisson, Flickr]

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Via: The Hill

Source: ACLU

Source: http://feeds.engadget.com/~r/weblogsinc/engadget/~3/AGcJmyfq-lc/

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