Recent controversies about the National Security Agency\u27s warrantless wiretapping of international calls have overshadowed equally disturbing allegations that the government has acquired access to a huge database of domestic call traffic data, revealing information about times, dates, and numbers called. Although communication content traditionally has been the primary focus of concern about overreaching government surveillance, law enforcement officials are increasingly interested in using sophisticated computer analysis of noncontent traffic data to map networks of associations. Despite the rising importance of digitally mediated association, current Fourth Amendment and statutory schemes provide only weak checks on government. The p...
The digital age has brought new possibilities and potency to state surveillance activities. Signific...
This article will question what role private and public actors assume in the current structure of da...
The mosaic theory — first articulated by the Supreme Court in United States v. Jones two years ago —...
Recent controversies about the National Security Agency\u27s warrantless wiretapping of internationa...
Protecting associational freedom is a core, independent yet unappreciated part of the Fourth Amendme...
In this paper, we study the evolution of telecommunications technology and its impact on law enforc...
Databases are full of personal information that law enforcement might find useful. Government access...
This Article reveals interdependent legal and technical loopholes that the US intelligence community...
The Department of Homeland Security has instituted rules to allow Customs and Border Patrol official...
This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded i...
Information to, from, and about U.S. persons routinely comes into the possession of the National Sec...
In a landmark non-decision last term, five Justices of the United States Supreme Court would have he...
Recent revelations of heretofore secret U.S. government surveillance programs have sparked national ...
We are in the midst of a revolution in information collection and telecommunications. Computer netwo...
Social Networking Sites like Facebook, Twitter and the like are a ubiquitous part of contemporary cu...
The digital age has brought new possibilities and potency to state surveillance activities. Signific...
This article will question what role private and public actors assume in the current structure of da...
The mosaic theory — first articulated by the Supreme Court in United States v. Jones two years ago —...
Recent controversies about the National Security Agency\u27s warrantless wiretapping of internationa...
Protecting associational freedom is a core, independent yet unappreciated part of the Fourth Amendme...
In this paper, we study the evolution of telecommunications technology and its impact on law enforc...
Databases are full of personal information that law enforcement might find useful. Government access...
This Article reveals interdependent legal and technical loopholes that the US intelligence community...
The Department of Homeland Security has instituted rules to allow Customs and Border Patrol official...
This symposium article is the second of two on regulation of government efforts to obtain recorded i...
Information to, from, and about U.S. persons routinely comes into the possession of the National Sec...
In a landmark non-decision last term, five Justices of the United States Supreme Court would have he...
Recent revelations of heretofore secret U.S. government surveillance programs have sparked national ...
We are in the midst of a revolution in information collection and telecommunications. Computer netwo...
Social Networking Sites like Facebook, Twitter and the like are a ubiquitous part of contemporary cu...
The digital age has brought new possibilities and potency to state surveillance activities. Signific...
This article will question what role private and public actors assume in the current structure of da...
The mosaic theory — first articulated by the Supreme Court in United States v. Jones two years ago —...