Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Artificial intelligence (1)
- Consumer privacy (1)
- Criminal law (1)
- Criminal procedure (1)
- Critical digital studies (1)
-
- Data (1)
- Digital (1)
- Facial recognition (1)
- Fourth amendment (1)
- Fusion centers (1)
- Gunshot detection (1)
- Law and technology (1)
- Militarized policing (1)
- Mosaic theory (1)
- Policing technologies (1)
- Predictive analytics (1)
- Protest (1)
- Race (1)
- Racial justice (1)
- Racialized surveillance (1)
- Search or seizure (1)
- ShotSpotter (1)
- Social movement (1)
- Surveillance (1)
- Surveillance technology (1)
- United States v. Jones (1)
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Privacy Law
The Automated Fourth Amendment, Maneka Sinha
The Automated Fourth Amendment, Maneka Sinha
Faculty Scholarship
Courts routinely defer to police officer judgments in reasonable suspicion and probable cause determinations. Increasingly, though, police officers outsource these threshold judgments to new forms of technology that purport to predict and detect crime and identify those responsible. These policing technologies automate core police determinations about whether crime is occurring and who is responsible. Criminal procedure doctrine has failed to insist on some level of scrutiny of—or skepticism about—the reliability of this technology. Through an original study analyzing numerous state and federal court opinions, this Article exposes the implications of law enforcement’s reliance on these practices given the weighty interests …
Black Lives Monitored, Chaz Arnett
Black Lives Monitored, Chaz Arnett
Faculty Scholarship
The police killing of George Floyd added fuel to the simmering flames of racial injustice in America following a string of similarly violent executions during a global pandemic that disproportionately ravaged the health and economic security of Black families and communities. The confluence of these painful realities exposed deep vulnerabilities and renewed a reckoning with the long unfulfilled promise of racial equality, inspiring large-scale protests around the country and across the globe. As with prior movements for racial justice, from slavery abolition to the civil rights movement’s demand to end Jim Crow, protests have been met with extreme force, either …
A Shattered Looking Glass: The Pitfalls And Potential Of The Mosaic Theory Of Fourth Amendment Privacy, David C. Gray, Danielle Keats Citron
A Shattered Looking Glass: The Pitfalls And Potential Of The Mosaic Theory Of Fourth Amendment Privacy, David C. Gray, Danielle Keats Citron
Faculty Scholarship
On January 23, 2012, the Supreme Court issued a landmark non-decision in United States v. Jones. In that case, officers used a GPS-enabled device to track a suspect’s public movements for four weeks, amassing a considerable amount of data in the process. Although ultimately resolved on narrow grounds, five Justices joined concurring opinions in Jones expressing sympathy for some version of the “mosaic theory” of Fourth Amendment privacy. This theory holds that we maintain reasonable expectations of privacy in certain quantities of information even if we do not have such expectations in the constituent parts. This Article examines and …