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Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Law
Passive, Sensory-Enhanced Searches: Shifting The Fourth Amendment "Reasonableness" Burden, T. Wade Mcknight
Passive, Sensory-Enhanced Searches: Shifting The Fourth Amendment "Reasonableness" Burden, T. Wade Mcknight
Louisiana Law Review
No abstract provided.
Electronic Surveillance And Conversations In Plain View: Admitting Intercepted Communications Relating To Crimes Not Specified In The Surveillance Order, John D. Ladue
Notre Dame Law Review
No abstract provided.
Commentary On Financial Privacy, Lynn M. Lopucki
Commentary On Financial Privacy, Lynn M. Lopucki
UF Law Faculty Publications
My three criticisms are this: First, Peter frames the problem as privacy versus government surveillance, thus ignoring the best solution to the problem, which is to make more information public. Second, Peter exaggerates the human need for privacy by presenting the need as immutable and essentially coextensive with embarrassment. People do not need nearly the privacy they think they do. Third, if Peter’s broad view of privacy holds, then you can forget about the information age.