Protracted debate about the federal government’s ability to collect Americans’ telephone metadata without a warrant, a matter which never was resolved, looks to be taking a back-seat, as the FBI is now pushing for a dramatic expansion of that power to include Internet metadata.
While telephone metadata was just who called whom and for how long, the Internet version amounts to unrestricted access to the browser history of every American, including what websites they visit, and what pages in particular they read.
Privacy groups are blasting the move, noting that the data would “paint an incredibly intimate picture of an individual’s life,” including things like political affiliation, medical conditions, religion, and sexual orientation.
FBI Director James Comey, however, insists that the law which lists all the metadata they can collect without a warrant, and which doesn’t mention browser histories, amounts to a “typo” in the law, and is demanding that Congress “fix” the matter so the FBI can force companies to hand over all that personal data. The FBI maintains the list in the law was meant to be “illustrative” of the type of things they can demand, and not all-inclusive.
Facebook, Yahoo, and Google are among a number of technology companies lining up to resist the change in the law, both because of the lack of judicial oversight such a broad new data collection plan would involve, and also because in practice the change in law would force them to do all the heavy lifting of collecting this data for the FBI to sift through.
They will have no browser history to see if you clear your browser history every day. that alone should stop it so they can try but american people are smarter than that. you can act as fancy schmancy as you want but all ya godda do is ctrl h tab tab tab enter enter down down down down enter tab tab tab tab tab tab enter tab enter tab enter tab enter and then tab enter. thats if ur using chrome. and congratulations you made the fbis many hours of trying to get your browser history invalid.
you are getting confused by terms,
they want access to you internet activity, not your local “browser history”
they are not asking to get access to your pc to check you mozilla or what ever.
they are going to you internet provider and asking for your “browsing history” where they want your ip and every single web site that ip visitied.
you can go ingonito or use tor, or what ever, but your internet provider still has record. unless you use a VPN and a good one can be quite expensive.
The 4th Amendment to the US Constitution is quite clear when it comes to warrantless searches, folks. The govt must obtain a warrant from a magistrate – stating probable cause – before searching anyone and/or his/her possessions.
This now includes computers and the metadata they may contain. The 4th Amendment also states that the govt may NOT obtain any data belonging to an individual that a third party (in this case, the person’s internet provider) would have. This is still a violation of privacy .. and, in this case, the FBI or any other alphabet agency must obtain a warrant from a magistrate – stating probable cause – before the internet provider may turn over the customer’s metadata.
the forth amendment makes no mention of “data”
but only “persons, houses, papers, and effects,” while the word existed at the time it did not have today’s primary definition. and honestly i can’t tell you which of the four internet activity would fall under.
and while a generally agree with your sentiment, i find my self a bit torn,
because ironically the fbi are basically making the “pirate” case against Intellectual Property right, and in all other cases i would agree, data can’t be owned, only horded away, but once its out in the open its free for anyone who wants to copy it.
clear browser history. It’s that simple. The FBI puts too much effort when us american people outwit them with common sense solutions. That’s america for you. You’re not one of those liberals that convolute stuff with overly complicated non-sense are you?
They are not looking in your browser history, they are looking for your ip address from you internet provider and everything that ip has done
you can blast you computer in to the sun and it wont hide a single thing.
Umm yes it will, like can you stop being dumb? you gobble up the medias narrative at your own discourse they tell you that because they know the consumer has lots of power, its common sense, browser history IS ON YOUR BROWSER! WHAT DO YOU NOT UNDERSTAND! HOW DUMB CAN YOU BE?
O rly is correct.
You are incorrect.
So you might want to back off on the accusations of dumbness.
what is so hard to understand?
[your computer]=/=[your internet provider]=/=[the internet]
they are not trying to take the information off your computer, they are demanding your internet providers and or the sites you visit turn over all your activity data.
incognito, or private browsing it to prevent your boss or significant other from seeing what porn you have been looking at.
you are basicly arguing that you can protect against NSA wire tapping your cellphone if you delete your call history,
they are not taking the information from you, but from the cellphone tower, or the actual cellphone company.
it is true…you local disk does contain your browser history. However, simply deleting the browser cache does not actually delete your history. The data can be recovered unless you purposely wipe it with a special program OR: you encrypt your hard drive and don’t reveal the passcode.
Now it also true that your browser history will also be recorded in several other remote data repositories, including but not necessarily limited to: your ISP. google/microsoft/apple, 3rd party ad tracking companies like double-click, NSA/5-Eyes, etc.
There are ways to mitigate against the remote tracking, e.g, VPN + privacy blocker will eliminate your ISP + ad-tracking companies
VPN + privacy blocker + disabling javascript might superficially kick out NSA/5-Eyes and google(almost every site out there uses google analytics for tracking). However, the price is a lousy browsing experience because most sites won’t work or perform poorly w/o javascript enabled.
VPN + privacy blocker + disabling javascript + Tor on a sandboxed USB linux bootable disk is your best bet.
What is Metadata? This short video, will explain what Metadata is and why it’s important to businesses and government spooks.
https://youtu.be/HXAstVP3-y0
Aug 1, 2013 NSA Collects ‘Word for Word’ Every Domestic Communication
Judy Woodruff sits down with two former NSA officials who blew the whistle on what they said were abuses at the NSA, along with that agency’s former inspector general, to talk about whether that secretive agency is recording all domestic calls in the U.S.
https://youtu.be/az-YWMNWQuU
Are you trolling, or really that ignorant?
ok you are either a troll or totally misinformed.
if its the latter watch this video to understand what happens every time you visit a webpage.
https://youtu.be/ewrBalT_eBM