Anonymous ID: 43c5bb April 30, 2019, 4:11 a.m. No.6369341   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9345 >>9354 >>9357 >>9365 >>9420

The location data is stored inside a Google database known as Sensorvault, which contains detailed location records of hundreds of millions of devices from around the world. The records reportedly contain location data going back to 2009. The data is collected whether or not users are making calls or using apps.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) says police are using a single warrant—sometimes known as a “geo-fence” warrant—to access location data from devices that are linked to individuals who have no connection to criminal activity and have not provided any reasonable suspicion of a crime. Jennifer Lynch, EFF’s Surveillance Litigation Director, says these searches are problematic for several reasons.

 

“First, unlike other methods of investigation used by the police, the police don’t start with an actual suspect or even a target device—they work backward from a location and time to identify a suspect,” Lynch wrote. “This makes it a fishing expedition—the very kind of search that the Fourth Amendment was intended to prevent. Searches like these—where the only information the police have is that a crime has occurred—are much more likely to implicate innocent people who just happen to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Every device owner in the area during the time at issue becomes a suspect—for no other reason than that they own a device that shares location information with Google.”

 

Butt it’s China that has such horrible Human Rights violations?

Anonymous ID: 43c5bb April 30, 2019, 4:24 a.m. No.6369377   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9388

Looking Glass Cyber Solutions?

Virginia.

 

In the days leading up to the protests, a private intelligence company that works with the Department of Homeland Security was monitoring the activity on the ground. Documents shared with The Intercept by the American Immigration Council, obtained through a freedom of information request, show that LookingGlass Cyber Solutions, a Virginia-based firm, gathered information on more than 600 demonstrations across the country, information that was then shared with DHS and state-level law enforcement agencies.

 

https://www.blacklistednews.com/article/72362/homeland-security-used-a-private-intelligence-firm-to-monitor-family-separation.html

 

https://map.lookingglasscyber.com/