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94% match on anything is... not a match. we share 98% of our dna with pigs.
23h
Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, an expert on digital surveillance, says local leaders must assess the effect on civil liberties far more thoroughly: “These are pretty basic questions and yet are rarely asked before new police technology is purchased.”
Do police need a warrant to access your gmail account? What local laws could restrict data tracking? How do other countries protect data privacy? Our Q&A with legal expert Andrew Guthrie Ferguson answers these and other questions on police surveillance.
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Quoted here in this latest facial recognition horror story. www.politico.com/newsletters/...
6d
a libi rose
8d
Good list of groups doing great work on surveillance tech. boltsmag.org/everything-e...
9d
A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
boltsmag.org
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
www.politico.com
Wrongful arrest suit sparks fresh scrutiny of police facial recognition
A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
boltsmag.org
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
In a new Q&A, law professor Andrew Guthrie Ferguson answers your questions on how surveillance and data tracking have become key tools within the criminal legal system.
Before the growth of surveillance networks, you could live with a presumption of innocence, says legal expert Andrew Guthrie Ferguson. “With mass surveillance systems the presumption evaporates, and we live under the surveillance as if we were all guilty.”
We asked for your questions about how police track personal data and now, Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, an expert on digital surveillance, has answers: “If you create the data, they can come for it. And you create a lot of data every day,” he says.
“There is nothing you do in a digital world that cannot be obtained with a judicial warrant,” says legal scholar Andrew Guthrie Ferguson. “All of it can be obtained by police seeking to prosecute you.”
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Bolts
Bolts
Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
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Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
Andrew Guthrie Ferguson
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A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
boltsmag.org
A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
boltsmag.org
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
boltsmag.org
A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
boltsmag.org
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
Bolts
Bolts
Bolts
Bolts
The purpose of this technology is not to accurately identify people but rather to instill in everyone the fear that they are constantly being watched.
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A legal expert on digital surveillance answers questions from Bolts readers about how police track your personal data, and what public officials could be doing to restrict it.
boltsmag.org
“Everything, Everywhere, All at Once Surveillance”: Your Questions Answered - Bolts
A Utah man says he endured months of fear and thousands of dollars in legal expenses after he says facial recognition technology incorrectly identified him as a
kutv.com
Facial recognition AI misidentifies Utah man in felony vandalism case
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