https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-new...-ride-past-burglarized-home-made-him-n1151761
And another recent example:
Police arrested an innocent man for murder using his Google location data and imprisoned him for 6 days
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...nt-man-murder-using-Google-location-data.html
If these two articles do not make people concerned for their privacy in the future, then I'm not sure what will. The usual 'if you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear' comments do not stand here, because these two men had nothing to hide and yet one of them had to spend almost a week locked up and the other had to part with thousands of dollars for a lawyer.
Examples like these are going to become more frequent as police forces and governments look to utilise every aspect of technology in their quest tocatch a few more criminals control us, and it means further erosion of our rights as well as the potential to ruin innocent lives... No thanks.
I'll just leave this here too:
NSA phone program cost $100 million but produced only two unique leads
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/25/us/politics/nsa-phone-program.html
	
		
			
		
		
	
				
			The email arrived on a Tuesday afternoon in January, startling Zachary McCoy as he prepared to leave for his job at a restaurant in Gainesville, Florida.
It was from Google’s legal investigations support team, writing to let him know that local police had demanded information related to his Google account. The company said it would release the data unless he went to court and tried to block it. He had just seven days.
“I was hit with a really deep fear,” McCoy, 30, recalled, even though he couldn’t think of anything he’d done wrong. He had an Android phone, which was linked to his Google account, and, like millions of other Americans, he used an assortment of Google products, including Gmail and YouTube. Now police seemingly wanted access to all of it.
And another recent example:
Police arrested an innocent man for murder using his Google location data and imprisoned him for 6 days
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...nt-man-murder-using-Google-location-data.html
A man is suing Arizona police for $1.5million after he was arrested and held for a murder he did not commit after Google's GPS tracker wrongly placed him at the scene of the 2018 crime.
Jorge Molina, 23, of Arizona, was arrested at his job at Macy's and spent six days in jail in December 2018 for the murder of Joseph Knight, 29, in March of that year, who was shot nine times outside his Avondale apartment.
Molina was fired from his job but was later released from jail without charge after prosecutors noted numerous inconsistencies with the location data that had tied him to the killing.
If these two articles do not make people concerned for their privacy in the future, then I'm not sure what will. The usual 'if you have nothing to hide, then you have nothing to fear' comments do not stand here, because these two men had nothing to hide and yet one of them had to spend almost a week locked up and the other had to part with thousands of dollars for a lawyer.
Examples like these are going to become more frequent as police forces and governments look to utilise every aspect of technology in their quest to
I'll just leave this here too:
NSA phone program cost $100 million but produced only two unique leads
https://www.nytimes.com/2020/02/25/us/politics/nsa-phone-program.html
 
	 
  
 
		 
 
		

 
 
		