In the case of Seymour v. Colorado, Denver police executed a search warrant that required Google to provide the IP addresses of anyone who had searched for...
I guess it could sometimes be an unfortunate coincidence that you do something suspicious where a crime just occurred. But surely you’d be proven innocent after looking at other evidence.
This goes beyond coincidence. This is more like you being a suspect every time some crime is committed. I’m sure in a perfect world you would be proven innocent… but that world doesn’t exist and handing over this power to corporate entities and govts only opens it up for abuse.
@knexcar @throws_lemy @Clent
If you didn’t commit a crime, why should be part of the line up of suspects?
I guess it could sometimes be an unfortunate coincidence that you do something suspicious where a crime just occurred. But surely you’d be proven innocent after looking at other evidence.
In a perfect world, sure. This is not a perfect world. The justice system wrongly convicts people every day.
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@knexcar @throws_lemy @Clent
This goes beyond coincidence. This is more like you being a suspect every time some crime is committed. I’m sure in a perfect world you would be proven innocent… but that world doesn’t exist and handing over this power to corporate entities and govts only opens it up for abuse.
deleted by creator