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Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Stay informed on censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance, and learn how to take your digital rights back.

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Stay informed on censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance, and learn how to take your digital rights back.

How a Typo in a Geofence Warrant Further Endangered Privacy

Everyone in a two-mile radius became a suspect in a crime.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.

As the (paraphrased here) classic pop song goes โ€“ โ€œsome typos are bigger than others.โ€

Namely, a โ€œsuspected typoโ€ in a geofencing warrant is to blame for extending surveillance of everybody and their phone in a given physical location from a supposedly restricted one โ€“ to in one instance โ€œtwo miles over San Francisco,โ€ reports say.

That would include businesses, private homes, and places of worship.

The incident highlights the problems related to this legal/law enforcement tactic, and its implementation, and reminds those willing to listen why it is wrong to begin with โ€“ warrant order typos or not.

First of all, in the US โ€“ the dragnet-style โ€œhuntโ€ is now considered unethical even when it concerns marine animals. So how could it possibly be acceptable, but also, constitutional, to treat every human that happens to be in one location as a potential suspect?

But thatโ€™s geofencing, 101.

It turns the rule of โ€œinnocent until proven guiltyโ€ on its head, and is therefore, as critics concerned with civil liberties insist, clearly unconstitutional.

Nevertheless, US judges keep signing off on such warrants, although the actual numbers are not entirely clear. Keeping that secret is one way for a country to implement a true, functional democracy, โ€œrule of lawโ€ principle. Or not.

And now we have evidence of things around geofencing going south not only regarding the very nature of the thing โ€“ but also just related to clerical issues.

โ€œMany private homes were also captured in the massive sweep,โ€ ACLU attorney Jake Snow said in a blog post.

The truly disturbing thing about the story, though, is the essential secrecy of it all โ€“ citizens are not even allowed to know which law enforcement outfit asked for the particular San Francisco warrant, nor the time span it covered.

Those relying on geofencing โ€“ surely โ€“ must be aware that the practice is already so fraught with controversy that they literally canโ€™t afford to make many more โ€œslips.โ€

But they donโ€™t seem to be aware of it. And here we are: on top of the whole thing being a mess from the standpoint of civil rights, and sheer legality โ€“ now geofencing warrants also feature costly-to-civil-rights โ€œtypos.โ€

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.

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Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Stay informed on censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance, and learn how to take your digital rights back.

Logo with a red shield enclosing a stylized globe and three red arrows pointing upward to the right, next to the text 'RECLAIM THE NET' with 'RECLAIM' in gray and 'THE NET' in red

Resist censorship. Reject surveillance. Reclaim your voice.

Stay informed on censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance, and learn how to take your digital rights back.