NJ Supreme Court Rules For Internet Privacy 84
dprovine writes "The New Jersey Supreme Court
has ruled that ISPs can't release customer information without a warrant. The unanimous decision reads in part 'We now hold that citizens have a reasonable expectation of privacy protected by Article I ... of the New Jersey Constitution, in the subscriber information they provide to Internet service providers — just as New Jersey citizens have a privacy interest in their bank records stored by banks and telephone billing records kept by phone companies.'"
Precedence in US Vs Forrester (Score:4, Informative)
This happened just last year. How are they going to reconcile these two rulings?
Re:Precedence in US Vs Forrester (Score:5, Informative)
I am guessing this issue will one day wind up before the US Supreme Court. We know that Congress won't address the issue, so it will probably be left to the lawyers in black robes.
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Re:Precedence in US Vs Forrester (Score:4, Interesting)
Not really, State & Federal courts really move in different circles. The Feds will get info without the warrant & none of the proceeds will be usable for any ancillary state charges, but it won't affect the federal case.
The interesting thing to me is that the court ruled that the problem was with the type of seupona used. Per the article, the cops went & got one from a judge, but the court ruled that they needed to go to a grand jury instead. That seems a bit odd to me, it was my understanding that the GJ was usually brought in after most of the investigation was done, not at the beginning.
Re:Precedence in US Vs Forrester (Score:4, Interesting)
I've been waiting to see this type of conflict. I'm surprised that it would happen in New Jersey, but many states have their own Constitutions which define the Rights of their citizens even more broadly than what's in the U.S. Constitution. IANAL, but if I have certain Rights under my State Constitution, the fact that the same Rights are not specifically elaborated in the U.S. Constitution shouldn't mean that agents of the Federal government are free to trample on them.
It would be great if New Jersey had some guts and empowered the NJ State Police to arrest Federal agents for the crime of illegally spying on NJ residents.
State and Federal citizen's rights (Score:4, Insightful)
The Federalist Papers tried to reassure people that the proposed new Federal government couldn't succeed as a tyranny because the states would defend the rights of state citizens.
This has been largely forgotten since the national government had to step in and override state-level oppression of African-Americans.
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That's a problem that's existed since the time the Constitution was written. The Bill of Rights was a compromise because the Constitution is supposed to be a document saying very specifically what the government can do. By adding in a list of citizens rights they can't infri
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Just Checking
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This amendment was the basis of the doctrine of states' rights that became the rallying cry of the Southern states.
I see it worked out well for them.
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Re:Precedence in US Vs Forrester (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Precedent in US Vs Forrester (Score:2)
In that case (425 U.S. 435, 442 (1976)) the Supreme Court ruled that phone records weren't private because they were information the customer voluntarily disclosed to the phone company that the phone company employees had routine access to.
Don't flame me, I didn't say it was _right_.
Re:Precedence in US Vs Forrester...wrong (Score:2)
Sure, privacy is nice (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Sure, privacy is nice (Score:5, Funny)
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We have two major highways that run north-south, and I'd guess at least 80% of our population lives within 20 miles of one of them. Telling someone which exit you're near just gives them an idea of where your hometown
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Still though, if you took away the areas near NYC, you'd have a hard time finding another state in the nation with a road system as good as New Jersey's.
Unfortunately, the roads within the Elizabeth-Paterson-Weehawken area resemble some sort of Escherian Triangl
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I find it a great place to live, myself.
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The higher cost of living, compared to my increase in income, becomes laughable at that point. Of course, YMMV, but living near NY provides someone with skills all kinds of opportunity to both make lots of money and find a job you actually enjoy doing. You can even easily find work that doesn't involve a 9-to-5 shift, at which point the horrible rush-hour traffic becomes
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The southern part of New Jersey (low population) is nice. Ditto the portion bordering the Pennsylvania line. But the rest of it? Pass.
Now Maryland... there's a nice state.
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And, New Jersey is not three times larger than Maryland. It takes about 3 hours to drive across Jersey (northward).... it takes almost 5 hours to drive from Maryland's shoreline to the western mountains. So I'd say Maryland has greater breadth, and about the same area as NJ.
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They have bars on their windows and rent their rooms by the hour.
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... none of the NYC snobs know about the pine barrens or the sourlands or the turkey farms, orchards, Amish markets, etc... I'm a lot closer to a tractor dealership than I am to a refinery.
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That must be sweet.
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Sometimes I still get out and pump my own, though, just because it's quicker and I'm used to doing it, having lived in other states.
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Unless the authorities get a warrant. Surely that's the way it should be?
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Surely that's the way it should be?
Yes, except don't forget that even though there are separation of powers, they're ALL on the same team. If, say, the FISA court is any guide, only 5 out of 14,000 warrants [slate.com] were rejected by that court. Even if NJ courts are three times as finicky about their warrants, that's still 99.9% warrants happily approved.
I doubt real world warrants are as agonized and debated as on Law and Order. The reality is more likely that they're handed out without much coaxing, since it helps propagate the system (with warran
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Re:great news for thieves (Score:4, Interesting)
Or maybe money (or lack thereof) is the reason they can't be bothered investigating every singe one of the 14,000 warrants. Maybe even only about 5 (or 10 or 15) were actually bad warrants, and the rest were perfectly legal and perfectly justifiable.
So, we have two possibilities: a) the government is cohesive, efficient, greedy, corrupt, ruthless, or b) the government is slow, inefficient, under-funded (at least, if you want every warrant triple checked by every layer of authority), and lazy.
I'm betting on b), based on previous encounters with governments and their employees. The separation of powers would also explain the inefficiency, which would in turn explain the low warrant rejection rate. Or I could be wrong, and it could be a) the evil plutocrats wanting quick arrests for some god-knows reason.
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EULA (Score:2, Insightful)
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Re:EULA (Score:4, Insightful)
What EULA? They don't license you anything. This isn't software we are talking about you know. It's a contract you sign with your ISP. Their services in exchange for your money.
On the less pedantic side, do you really think the ISPs want to give your data away? There is no profit in doing so, in fact it might even cause customer loss, which is bad for business. No, the reason they give out your data is because they think they have a legal obligation to do so. Now the court has said it isn't, so they won't.
They are happy to sell your data (Score:1)
On the less pedantic side, do you really think the ISPs want to give your data away? There is no profit in doing so, in fact it might even cause customer loss, which is bad for business. No, the reason they give out your data is because they think they have a legal obligation to do so. Now the court has said it isn't, so they won't.
How would this judgement affect the Deep Packet Inspection methods used by Contextual based advertising activity by the likes of Phorm and Nebuad?
Your data is being sold to a third party.
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/04/04/208225 [slashdot.org]
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/18/2033202 [slashdot.org]
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/06/23/1233212 [slashdot.org]
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If the ISP can hide behind the EULA as a contract how long before banks and telecoms jump on this bandwagon?
Zero days. Banks are, and have been for a long time, training various staff members how to scan through account history and locate "suspicious" (as defined by the feds) activity.
It's called the "Know your customer" campaign.
And, since it's the bank data, the can do this as often and however they want, hand the data over as a friendly tip and there's not a goddamn thing you can do about it. (Aside from not use banks, which will probably get you on some other list.)
I know this, because I helped devel
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Banker's aren't trained to look for suspicious items in the invasive sense that you're suggesting. They don't check to see if you've made any purchases to "ImprovisedExplosiveSupplies.com". The suspicious activity they're looking for are related to money laundering. The "know your customer" campaign at most banks was related to some of the PATRIOT Act requirements imposed post 9/11 (and unlike most of the PATRIOT Act th
Next time they'll get the correct warrant.. (Score:1)
This won't just effect people from NJ (Score:2, Interesting)
Grand jury is now required (Score:2, Informative)
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Text of ruling (Score:2, Informative)
Also interesting for what the court did *not* do (Score:3, Informative)
In this case, an appellate court had previously held that the New Jersey state constitution grants a broad-based right to "informational privacy." Some state constitutions explicitly grant a right to privacy; NJ doesn't, but the Court reads our constitution as having one anyway. And then the appellate court expanded this judicially-granted right to include "informational privacy." The NJ Supreme Court rejected this expansion, although they said that they might change their minds if technology progresses to the point where IP addresses are more freely available.
All in all, I'm happy they ditched the Appellate Division's interpretation. I liked the idea of informational privacy, but I didn't like it coming through the courts.
*In that case, police officers read Nyhammer his Miranda rights. Nyhammer waived his rights, signed the Miranda card, and confessed to molesting an 11-year old girl. The appellate court held that Nyhammer's fifth amendment rights were violated; although he waived his rights, he didn't know at the time that he was a suspect. Therefore, his waiver wasn't really knowing and voluntary, and the court overturned his conviction. Talk about an expansive reading of a right against self-incrimination.
Guilty but let go (Score:5, Insightful)
Sometimes the question of an individual's guilt is secondary to the precedent which would be formed. It is absolutely the space between the rock and the hard place. Do you let a criminal go free or do you let an abuse of power go unchecked?
More often than not, it is a "guilty" person who is on the receiving end of injustice such as invasion of privacy or violation of the 4th amendment. It is unfortunate that we don't have more clearly innocent people to protect. Generally speaking, police believe the "criminal" to be guilty. More often than not, they are, but this does not excuse a violation of constitutional rights to get a conviction.
Our rights are in place to prevent the innocent from being falsely convicted by creating a system of checks and balances that is supposed to prevent abuse by police, prosecutors, etc. Inherent in the system is the acknowledgment that people are corrupt and corruptible but the hope that not all people are in the same pockets.
My favorite example is O.J. Simpson. I am as confident that he killed his wife as I am that police planted evidence to get a conviction.
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Generally speaking, police believe the "criminal" to be guilty. More often than not, they are, but this does not excuse a violation of constitutional rights to get a conviction.
Our rights are in place to prevent the innocent from being falsely convicted by creating a system of checks and balances that is supposed to prevent abuse by police, prosecutors, etc.
What you're talking about is the tension between the 'crime control' model and the 'due process' model.
The names are fairly self explanatory, but here is what CliffsNotes has to say [cliffsnotes.com].
Cliffs Notes claims Crime Control is a 'conservative' viewpoint and Due Process is a 'liberal' one, but keep in mind that historically speaking, Crime Control was pretty much the order of the day until very recently.
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As a card carrying member of the ACLU, I regret this sort of case, but it is never the less the proper outcome. For all the people who hate the ACLU because the defend the "guilty" because of a technicality of law, remember this sort of case.
The way I look at it, as long as my rights are respected, all I have to do to stay out of jail is obey the law. If they're not respected, who knows.
Meanwhile, sometimes strict enforcement of rights lets a criminal go free. When that happens, they will either decide that was too close and stop breaking the law (problem solved) or they'll re-offend and get jailed.
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Let's hope you are not on the "terrorist watch list" by accident. Let's hope your house's address is not a transposition of some criminals. Lets hope you understand law well enough to know what is and what is not illegal.
Are you a sexually active heterosexual male? Do you know in how many or which states that fellatio is illegal?
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The way I look at it, as long as my rights are respected, all I have to do to stay out of jail is obey the law. Let's hope you are not on the "terrorist watch list" by accident. Let's hope your house's address is not a transposition of some criminals. Lets hope you understand law well enough to know what is and what is not illegal. Are you a sexually active heterosexual male? Do you know in how many or which states that fellatio is illegal?
I didn't say my rights are respected here and now. Those rights include a right to a code of law that I can understand fully without an extraordinary effort. Part of that implies no laws against things that society as a whole doesn't see as wrong. Another part is no laws against consentual activities that don't harm others significantly. That also means law enforcement should make every effort to avoid errors and go through due process should an imposition (such as a search) be necesary. Once that is done
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What about federal interference. (Score:3, Interesting)
summary is wrong. i must be new here. (Score:2)
Orin Kerr discusses and links to the case at volokh.com, which isn't coming up for me right now.
Also, most of the commenters seem to have missed that this is a case about the new jersey constitution, not about the 4th amendment.
Above post is informative and insightful.
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