White House Says Feds Should Have Unfettered Access To Mobile Phone Location Info

from the *sigh* dept

Many civil libertarians were hopeful that the Obama administration would be a lot more reasonable on certain issues, like warrantless wiretapping and surveillance of Americans. So far, that hasn’t really been the case. The new administration has already sided with the old on the legality of warrantless wiretapping, and is now saying that it shouldn’t need a warrant to demand location records from mobile phone providers. This certainly seems like the sort of private info that, under the 4th Amendment, would require a warrant, but not according to the administration(s). It feels that mobile phone providers should freely hand over records of what mobile phone tower any phone was connected to, even without the administration bothering to get a warrant (i.e., whenever and for whomever it wants to keep tabs on). This is tremendously problematic if you believe in the basic principles of the 4th Amendment. The EFF and the ACLU have asked a court to stop this practice, and it’s rather disappointing that the administration is pushing in the other direction.

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Comments on “White House Says Feds Should Have Unfettered Access To Mobile Phone Location Info”

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31 Comments
Ann says:

Re: What the hell

Actually, it will probably get much, much worse. Taking a cue from states such as Oregon, the feds are looking at mandating GPS be installed on all vehicles, ostensibly to provide information for a new road tax–the Dept. of Transportation is running a road user study with participants allowing GPS units that are monitored by the government to be installed in their vehicles. (Don’t exprect the gasoline tax to go away either once a new road tax is imposed.) An added benefit will be that the government will have yet more ways of tracking you, if they so desire.

dave says:

Re: What the hell

actually, thats exactly what those under-the-skin RFID tags are being developed for….they want them to be MANDATORY so they can track your info, your location, where you go, what you do, who you talk to, and most importantly, what you spend your money on as all transactions would be logged via the chip. no surprise that media outlets like FOX seem to think that this is a “good” idea…

Anonymous Coward says:

I say ok

I trust the Obama administration to use this practice in moderation. What I would like to see is a confidential record to be kept of every citizen and number warrant(lessly) wiretapped, with a FOIA type expiration date to be unsealed when requested years later. Obama already seems conscious of his legacy, and might thus seek to limit the number of false-positive wiretaps.

FLguy says:

Re: I say ok

You trust the Obama administration to use this practice in moderation?? Are you serious? So were you ok when the Bush administration started down this path or did you get all ruffled over that? And if that bothered you it’s now ok since Obama is doing it?

I never have really trusted anything that comes out of a mouth in DC, and this administration certainly isn’t helping thus far.

Dreamcaster says:

What else...?

The Government can demand all they want. Just remember that the power is ultimately in the hands of the people. We are millions and they are a couple hundred. We have forgotten that we LET these people run our lives.

What else do they think they can demand from us? “Big Brother” will always want an eye everywhere for “Total safety and security.” But where do we draw the line? When do we as a people tell the Government that they no longer have the authority to pass such legislature without our permission?

This whole country has gone to shit and we need to fix it as a people and stop relying only on the Government to fix it for us. Yes, that’s what they’re here for, but the more power we give them, the more power they’ll take.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: What else...?

“We are millions and they are a couple hundred.”

They are a lot more than that. And they are well armed.

“We have forgotten that we LET these people run our lives.”

We LET them because they force us. I’m far more afraid of them than I am of Al Queda. So i just keep my head down and try not to draw their attention.

Nelson Cruz says:

You have to admit cell phone location info can be very useful information for law enforcement, and in some cases it can be time sensitive and therefore impractical to ask for a warrant first (a kidnapping for example). So, allowing the warrant to be filed after the fact (in time sensitive situations) would be reasonable. But warrantless access to this info could lead to real time monitoring of millions of people in the near future.

The moment president Obama finds out that someone at the NSA is tracking his daughters or his wife through their cell phones, he’ll change his mind pretty quick. Similar things have happened here in Portugal and in Italy. Governments approved relaxed rules for phone tapping and the jailing of defendants while waiting trial, but then rushed to limit it when it was actually used on public officials and politicians.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

So, allowing the warrant to be filed after the fact (in time sensitive situations) would be reasonable.
That already exists.

But warrantless access to this info could lead to real time monitoring of millions of people in the near future.
Which is exactly what any sane person does NOT want. If you think real-time monitoring of people is a good thing I have a little book I want you to read, it is called Nineteen Eighty-Four.

The moment president Obama finds out that someone at the NSA is tracking his daughters or his wife through their cell phones, he’ll change his mind pretty quick. Similar things have happened here in Portugal and in Italy. Governments approved relaxed rules for phone tapping and the jailing of defendants while waiting trial, but then rushed to limit it when it was actually used on public officials and politicians.
You don’t seem that familiar with the way laws work in america. here, they take for bloody ever to get rid of laws that everyone hates (prohibition) and even ignoring that point laws should not be made in a style of throwing everything to see what sticks and then repeal it if it doesn’t. Not to mention that it is a major violation of our constitution, you may have heard of it, it is a piece of paper that used to mean something here.

Nelson Cruz (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Anonymous Coward, that was exactly my point. This info should be available to law enforcement on a limited case by case basis, just like wiretapping. If unfettered access is granted it will lead to mass surveillance, which would be bad. I am familiar with 1984. I haven’t read it, but have been meaning to for a long time.

I’m also familiar with (and actually read :)) the US Constitution, and I totally agree with you. My point was, if Obama or anyone in government right now, is for unfettered surveillance via cell phones, they will likely change their minds when it gets abused – J. Edgar Hoover style – against them. This isn’t an excuse to let them approve these laws, but rather something they should be reminded off, so they don’t.

Now that I think about it, a J. Edgar Hoover type scandal would be good for the US and the world right now. To stop all these ideas of unfettered surveillance and security above everything.

Joe Shmo says:

This is getting redonkulous

You blind followers of Hussien never seize to amaze me. Almost every single person he has appointed to office has been crooked in some way. Yet you trust him with this issue, which outraged you when it was the Bush admin? McCain wanted to tax health care benefiets which was horrible, now Obama wants to do the same and its a good idea right? If you think Bush was 1/4th as crooked as Obama, then you are either retarded, or need to stop watching CNN.
@Cap’n Jack, how much can one man do? I dont know, execute 10 times the normal amount of executive orders as any president in history by his 3rd month. Spend 10 trillion dollars by his third month. Pass any bill he wants with the current officials in office in the Senate and House.
This is a Stalinist dictatorship, if you think you weren’t safe 4 months ago, hold on to your ass now.

Mike Raphone says:

Snoop on the opposition.

I guess the current administration wants to pull an Elliot Spitzer on all Americans. Snoop on the opposition and then find a means to destroy their reputation. How long will it take for the Government to require all citizens or persons visiting the Unites States to have a tracking device implanted. I do not want to seem like a Luddite but I see some technology as privacy’s enemy.

pmp888 (profile) says:

Aw, come on Mike, you’re smarter than this – it may “seem” like the sort of information the 4thAm would require a warrant to obtain, but you don’t need to exaggerate what’s actually being argued here. While it’s worth debating what the proper standard should be for getting cell phone location data (whether it be tower info, or much more precise GPS information) from a mobile provider, the question of whether the 4th Amendment protects this information from disclosure without a warrant is different (and many courts over the years have held it doesn’t). Looking at the “bumper beeper” cases, they don’t find 4thAm interests implicated where the tracking is in public space; tower info is so imprecise that it really can’t pinpoint your location in private areas. There’s also a long line of cases finding that the 4thAm generally doesn’t prohibit disclosure of information you’ve either handed over to third parties, or which was generated by the third party about you. Finally, it’s worth noting that the issue here isn’t between requiring a search warrant and having no standards, but rather, whether some other type of court order will suffice to obtain these records.

I don’t mean to suggest that it’s not worth debating what the standards ought to be for getting this information – it is – but then perhaps it would be worth a longer Techdirt post explaining why this information ought to be given greater protection than it has in the past.

Fred says:

Big Bro-ther is in the House!

Tis no surprise here. The left claimed to have the moral high ground on privacy, but indeed, they are actually more interested in your business than W ever cared to be.

How else can they seize more of what you earn, if they can’t electronically track you?

F’r instance, “use tax” on out of state purchases is only viable when there is an electronic audit trail for the tax board to use against the buyer. Try collecting that $.85 on paper, but collect that $85.00 over 100 purchases for the year, add on fines, and you’ve got a huge revenue source for spreading the wealth around. Isn’t it convenient that Ebay now mandates Paypal? No more off-the-books income for the masses.

With GPS tracking, not only will it become easier for the state to assess virtual child support payments (an automatic lien on your person at 18% interest), but to establish state of residence (the better to tax you with) and trump you up on newly invented interstate commerce violations. Oh yes, they’re coming. Imagine the cigarette cartons with RFID chips embedded…

Sure, it sounds paranoid. But we’ve come from a place where smoking was permitted everywhere, to a society where plastic bags are banned, dogs are lo-jacked, indian mascots and coke machines are evicted from school campuses, law enforcement officers lose their jobs ex-post-facto over misdemeanor domestic battery, and MSNBC can act as judge, jury and executioner for thought crimes.

Its only a matter of time before they come for you.

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