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.
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.