Law in the Internet Society
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Hard Drives, File Cabinets?

-- By BerrakComert - 20 Dec 2011

As the Internet, computers and new technologies root further into our daily lives, we face questions of how to address the issues relating to these new elements of our lives. The easiest way to categorize and solve these new problems is to resort to analogies and use our knowledge and experience that have already been there for centuries. In light of this seemingly simple approach, we can think of everything that is happening in this new segment of our lives the same as what we know except in a different environment. Accordingly, cybercrimes would simply be crimes committed in a different environment. Our online privacy would be our privacy in a different environment, a note we write online would be like a public speech we gave. However; this oversimplification cannot be inclusive enough to cover what the fast developing digital world keeps offering. Second, the most exciting thing about the internet era was the freedom it promised and did bring. This oversimplifying analogy of adapting our old concepts to the digital world does not only violate the freedom of the digital era but makes us much less free, even less free than what we began with. And finally, especially in criminal law, analogies can result to very restrictive means that threaten our freedoms and privacy even more aggressively than before.

One of the analogies of the digital world utilized by courts and legal scholars suggest that computer hard drives are just like filing cabinets that we put our files. But our computers contain the broadest data about us in the richest variety. Further, it also contains a lot of information about us, our past or present, which we do not even intentionally keep there.

When discussing computers as source of evidence, especially in the context of cybercrimes, the most commonly discussed examples are child pornography cases. Due to dreadfulness of the crime alleged, the exorbitance of violating the privacy of the suspect computer owner appears more tolerable. The necessity of such invasive measure becomes more questionable in cases of tax fraud, In the Matter of the Search of: 3817 W. West End, or illegal steroid use by professional athletes, United States v. Comprehensive Drug Testing.

Examples from other places in the world can be much more dramatic and clearer to display the level of the privacy rape. A Turkish journalist, Ahmet Şık, was detained on 3 March 2011 along with other journalists. He has been under arrest since 6 March 2011, the main evidence against him being the copy of the unpublished book he wrote, which was found during a warrant in his home and allegedly in the computers of a news website, which was also alleged to have connections with an alleged ultra-nationalist organization in Turkey with possible ties to members of the country's military and security forces, a military coup plot, or merely a conspiracy for some.

As the severeness of the offence changes or even the definition of the offense blurs, it is more difficult to justify the necessity of such invasive measure. Even if governments want to treat our computers as filing cabinets, do we use them as filing cabinets, or do we treat them as a private area where we imagine and expect to be more free and untouchable by others.

In order to protect the 4th Amendment rights of the citizens, the Courts have adopted various restrictive measures limiting the computer hard drive searches. Such restrictions include (i) on-site seizure of computers, (ii) timing of the subsequent off-site search, (iii) method of the off-site search, and (iv) return of the seized computers when searches are complete. While the constitutionality and utility of such restrictions are still argued, it is important to note that these restrictions are nowhere near answering the privacy concern of individuals.

Border searches

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r2 - 21 Dec 2011 - 06:30:58 - BerrakComert
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