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'Big Sis' Reasserts Unlimited Power to Seize and Inspect Laptops

3129 Wrote: Feb 14, 2013 6:02 PM
i SUGGEST THAT travelers going abroad adopt the Washington Post rule of morality: If it involves something you would not like to see on the front page of the Washington Post, don't do it. E-files, Facebook etc. can be highly embarrassing if not criminally incriminating. Us prosecutors love to discover what drug gangs put on their computers. Homeland Defense has the same attitude. Customs inspectors have always had free rein if not the bit in their teeth. Travelers beware. Viva la revolucion. Impeach Obama.

President Obama did not mention it in his State of the Union address last night, and there hasn’t been much attention devoted to it in the Congress of late; but, the fundamental right to privacy Americans have a right to expect from their own government, has suffered yet another body blow.

On the surface, things seem to be in order. For example, at the beginning of February, the Federal Trade Commission released a staff report outlining consumer privacy recommendations for developers of mobile phone apps. FTC Chairman Jon Leibowitz called the recommendations “best practices” intended to “safeguard consumer privacy,” that...

Wednesday, May 22 | 03:53 AM ET
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Wednesday, May 22 | 03:53 AM ET