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Supreme Court takes up text privacy case – Los Angeles Times
5 hours ago ago from Time For Computer | tips and resources for desktop, laptop, and computer basics
New York Daily News Supreme Court takes up text privacy case Los Angeles Times Police in Ontario say their rights were violated when their boss read text messages sent on city-provided devices. Justices will hear Ontario's appeal of the officers' successful suit. By David G. Savage Reporting from Washington The Supreme Court Supreme Court To Weigh In On Employee Text Messaging Privacy ChannelWeb Supreme Court Takes ...
Related contentCourt to rule on privacy of texting - Washington Post
1 hour, 24 minutes ago ago from webMania
By admin New York Daily News Court to rule on privacy of texting Washington Post The Supreme Court will decide whether employees have a reasonable expectation of privacy for the text messages they send on devices owned by their employers. The case the court accepted Monday involves public employees, but a broadly Supreme Court To Weigh In On Employee Text Messaging Privacy ChannelWeb Supreme Court Takes Texting Case New York Times ...
Related contentSupreme Court Takes Text-Message Privacy Case (New York Times)
11 hours ago ago from Make Message
A police department inspected a worker’s personal messages sent and received on a government pager. See more here: Supreme Court Takes Text-Message Privacy Case (New York Times)
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7 hours ago ago from Crime and Consequences Blog
An Example of a "somewhat irresponsible" Editorial: At Sentencing Law and Policy, Doug Berman comments that the New York Times editorial, " No Humane Execution ," irresponsibly discusses the facts surrounding the single drug execution of Kenneth Biros last week. Berman points to three phrases in the editorial that wrongly portray the facts (i.e. only death penalty advocates believed that a single-drug protocol would be less painful), and ...
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Supreme Court Takes Texting Case
8 hours ago ago from The New York Times
WASHINGTON The Supreme Court agreed on Monday to decide whether a police department violated the constitutional privacy rights of an employee when it inspected personal text messages sent and received on a government pager. Related Times Topics: U.S. Supreme Court The case opens a new frontier in Fourth Amendment jurisprudence, according to a three-judge panel of an appeals court that ruled in favor of the employee, a ...
Related contentBBC News - US court rejects appeal by UK ex-Guantanamo inmates
13 hours ago ago from BBC
The Obama administration had opposed the appeal Four British former Guantanamo Bay prisoners have failed in their bid to bring legal action against leading members of the Bush administration. The US Supreme Court refused to take up an appeal by the four. Shafiq Rasul, Asif Iqbal, Rhuhel Ahmed and Jamal al-Harith said they were the victims of torture and religious abuse during detention. Lower courts had already thrown out ...
Related contentSupreme Court will decide whether employees' text messages are private
3 hours ago ago from Washington Post - U.S.
The Supreme Court will decide whether employees have a reasonable expectation of privacy for the text messages they send on devices owned by their employers. The case the court accepted Monday involves public employees, but a broadly written decision could hold a blueprint for private-workplace rules in a world in which communication via computers, e-mail and text messages plays a very large role. A federal appeals court in California ...
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