NetiquetteIQ - Electronic surveillance by the US is not new
Seal of the government of the US |
Again, it can be stated that Netiquette does include the possibility that emails are not private and that there is no expectation of full privacy. This should always weigh in on the utilization of one's email.
Since the details of the NSA PRISM (see my post of 6/9/2013) initiative were leaked to the press in early June, there has been a mixture of surprise, outrage and wide range of responses from "pro" and "con" perspectives. However, it was not shocking at all to those who are aware of the various laws passed since 1986 when the Electronic Communication Privacy Act gave authorization to law enforcement agencies to monitor email and other forms of electronic communications.
Summary of the ECPA
As written in Wikipedia, "email that is stored on a third party's server for more than 180 days is considered by the law to be abandoned, and all that is required to obtain the content of the emails by a law enforcement agency, is a written statement certifying that the information is relevant to an investigation, with absolutely no judicial review required whatsoever.
When the law was initially passed,
emails were stored on a third party's server for only a short period of time,
just long enough to facilitate transfer of email to the consumer's email
client, which was generally located on their personal or work computer. Now,
with online email services prevalent such as Gmail and Hotmail, users are more
likely to store emails online indefinitely, rather than to only keep them for
less than 180 days. If the same emails were stored on the user's personal
computer, it would require the police to obtain a warrant first for seizure of
their contents, regardless of their age. When they are stored on an internet
server however, no warrant is needed, starting 180 days after receipt of the
message, under the law.
The ECPA also increased the list of
crimes that can justify the use of surveillance as well as the number of
judicial members who can authorize such surveillance. Data can be obtained on
traffic and calling patterns of an individual or group without a warrant,
allowing an agency to gain valuable intelligence and possibly invade privacy
without any scrutiny, because the actual content of the communication is left
untouched. While workplace communications are in theory protected, all that is
needed to gain access to communiqué is for an employer to simply give notice or
a supervisor to feel that the employee's actions are not in the company's
interest. This means that with minimal assumptions an employer can monitor
communications within the company. The ongoing debate is on where to limit the
government's power to see into civilian lives, while balancing the need to curb
national threats". Since the ECPA, additional laws have been enacted, each providing more latitude for email monitoring. These will be topics for future blogs.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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paul@netiquetteiq.com
Paul Babicki
paul@netiquetteiq.com
+Serkan Gecmen
serkan@netiquetteiq.com
"Good Netiquette Writing!"
#mailiq
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