Google Allowing
Government to Read Your Emails, Chats, Blogs Without Warrant or Probable Cause
With 425 million Gmail
subscribers, Google claims to be the largest email provider in
the world. They also provide telephone service through Google Voice,
document storage through Google Drive, personal blogs through Blogger and they
provide You Tube services.
Did you know that Google saves
and archives every form of communication that used any of their services?
That even includes any corporate clients.
If that doesn’t make you nervous, then this will. Google reports that they had 13,753 requests from local,
state and federal government agencies to access and read your
communications? The request involved 31,072 users. If you’re
still not too concerned, then wait, it gets better.
? It’s actually a combination of the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act and the Stored Wire Electronic
Communications Act. Passed by a Republican controlled Senate and
Demo;serif"; font-size: 13.5pt; mso-border-alt: none windowtext 0in; padding: 0in;">Did you know that there is a
federal law that allows government agencies, local, state and federal, to gain
access to Google’s archives without a warrant or establishing probable cause.
Have you ever heard of the Electronic Communications
Privacy Act (ECPA) of 1986? It’s actually a combination of the
Electronic Communications Privacy Act and the Stored Wire Electronic
Communications Act. Passed by a Republican controlled Senate and
Democratic controlled House, the Act was signed into law by Republican
President Ronald Reagan. Basically, the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) of
1986 states that all email that has been opened and
stored remotely and not on the hard drive of a computer, may be accessed
without warrant.
Now to confuse you as
to what they can and can’t get access to:
“If the government wants to read the content of an email accessed
through Gmail, hear a voicemail message sent over Google’s telephone service
Google Voice, or read other private content, it must still obtain a search
warrant under federal law.” “However,
information not sent in the body of an email or recorded in a voice message can
be obtained by a simple subpoena – which does not require a government agency
t>
Now that you are thoroughly confused as to what can be accessed by
which legal means, let me share this with you: of
the 13,753 requests from local, state and federal governments in 2012, Google
says that most of them were granted, even though a large number did not have
search warrants.
Therefore, be warned that if you use any
of Google’s services and you don’t want the government knowing what you are
saying or doing, then find another means of communication. However, that
other means is probably in the same boat Google is, so best to talk face-to-face
or not all if you are concerned about anyone else knowing.
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