Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the brain of an individual, allow the collection of forensic evidence regarding cerebral and cognitive processes, and are even beginning to be able to predict human intentions. While science has not yet produced a mind-reading machine per se, the devices referred to as cognitive camera technologies are substantial steps in the direction of that inevitable result. One such technique, a proprietary method called Brain Fingerprinting, is used as an example of the strong trend towards increasingly invasive and ever more powerful surveillance methods, and provides an entrée to a discussion of the limitations, if any, that the constitution might impose on...
For nearly 200 years, an individual’s personal papers enjoyed near-absolute protection from governme...
In the face of emerging technology, the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee of protection against unreasona...
Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck do...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
Technology has transformed government surveillance and opened traditionally private information to o...
In a world in which Americans are tracked on the Internet, tracked through their cell phones, tracke...
This paper argues that legal privacy should be afforded to the content of the mind, comparing cognit...
Will brain science be used by the government to access the most private of spaces — our minds — agai...
In 1967, the Supreme Court decided the landmark case of United States v. Katz, which engineered a pa...
This Article examines the idea that individuals have a moral and constitutional right of control ove...
On January 23, 2012, the Supreme Court issued a landmark non-decision in United States v. Jones. In ...
The rapid development of neurotechnologies poses novel constitutional issues for criminal law and cr...
The Fourth Amendment is broken into two clauses which protect freedom within the home and impose war...
For nearly 200 years, an individual’s personal papers enjoyed near-absolute protection from governme...
In the face of emerging technology, the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee of protection against unreasona...
Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck do...
Emerging surveillance technologies now allow operators to collect information located within the bra...
What would life be like if it became impossible to keep a secret? We may find out with the advent of...
With each passing day, new technologies push the horizons of official government investigative and s...
Technology has transformed government surveillance and opened traditionally private information to o...
In a world in which Americans are tracked on the Internet, tracked through their cell phones, tracke...
This paper argues that legal privacy should be afforded to the content of the mind, comparing cognit...
Will brain science be used by the government to access the most private of spaces — our minds — agai...
In 1967, the Supreme Court decided the landmark case of United States v. Katz, which engineered a pa...
This Article examines the idea that individuals have a moral and constitutional right of control ove...
On January 23, 2012, the Supreme Court issued a landmark non-decision in United States v. Jones. In ...
The rapid development of neurotechnologies poses novel constitutional issues for criminal law and cr...
The Fourth Amendment is broken into two clauses which protect freedom within the home and impose war...
For nearly 200 years, an individual’s personal papers enjoyed near-absolute protection from governme...
In the face of emerging technology, the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee of protection against unreasona...
Katz v. United States is the king of Supreme Court surveillance cases. Written in 1967, it struck do...