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- LEGAL OVERVIEW
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- THE ELECTRONIC FRONTIER AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS
-
- Advances in computer technology have brought us to a new frontier in
- communications, where the law is largely unsettled and woefully
- inadequate to deal with the problems and challenges posed by electronic
- technology. How the law develops in this area will have a direct impact
- on the electronic communications experiments and innovations being
- devised day in and day out by millions of citizens on both a large and
- small scale from coast to coast. Reasonable balances have to be struck
- among:
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- % traditional civil liberties
- % protection of intellectual property
- % freedom to experiment and innovate
- % protection of the security and integrity of computer
- systems from improper governmental and private
- interference.
-
- Striking these balances properly will not be easy, but if they are
- struck too far in one direction or the other, important social and legal
- values surely will be sacrificed.
-
- Helping to see to it that this important and difficult task is done
- properly is a major goal of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. It is
- critical to assure that these lines are drawn in accordance with the
- fundamental constitutional rights that have protected individuals from
- government excesses since our nation was founded -- freedom of speech,
- press, and association, the right to privacy and protection from
- unwarranted governmental intrusion, as well as the right to procedural
- fairness and due process of law.
-
- The First Amendment
-
- The First Amendment to the United States Constitution prohibits the
- government from "abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press," and
- guarantees freedom of association as well. It is widely considered to
- be the single most important of the guarantees contained in the Bill of
- Rights, since free speech and association are fundamental in securing
- all other rights.
-
- The First Amendment throughout history has been challenged by every
- important technological development. It has enjoyed only a mixed record
- of success. Traditional forms of speech -- the print media and public
- speaking -- have enjoyed a long and rich history of freedom from
- governmental interference. The United States Supreme Court has not
- afforded the same degree of freedom to electronic broadcasting,
- however.
-
- Radio and television communications, for example, have been subjected to
- regulation and censorship by the Federal Communications Commission
- (FCC), and by the Congress. The Supreme Court initially justified
- regulation of the broadcast media on technological grounds -- since
- there were assumed to be a finite number of radio and television
- frequencies, the Court believed that regulation was necessary to prevent
- interference among frequencies and to make sure that scarce resources
- were allocated fairly. The multiplicity of cable TV networks has
- demonstrated the falsity of this "scarce resource" rationale, but the
- Court has expressed a reluctance to abandon its outmoded approach
- without some signal from Congress or the FCC.
-
- Congress has not seemed overly eager to relinquish even
- counterproductive control over the airwaves. Witness, for example,
- legislation and rule-making in recent years that have kept even
- important literature, such as the poetry of Allen Ginsberg, from being
- broadcast on radio because of language deemed "offensive" to regulators.
- Diversity and experimentation have been sorely hampered by these rules.
-
- The development of computer technology provides the perfect opportunity
- for lawmakers and courts to abandon much of the distinction between the
- print and electronic media and to extend First Amendment protections to
- all communications regardless of the medium. Just as the multiplicity
- of cable lines has rendered obsolete the argument that television has to
- be regulated because of a scarcity of airwave frequencies, so has the
- ready availability of virtually unlimited computer communication
- modalities made obsolete a similar argument for harsh controls in this
- area. With the computer taking over the role previously played by the
- typewriter and the printing press, it would be a constitutional disaster
- of major proportions if the treatment of computers were to follow the
- history of regulation of radio and television, rather than the history
- of freedom of the press.
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- To the extent that regulation is seen as necessary and proper, it should
- foster the goal of allowing maximum freedom, innovation and
- experimentation in an atmosphere where no one's efforts are sabotaged by
- either government or private parties. Regulation should be limited by
- the adage that quite aptly describes the line that separates reasonable
- from unreasonable regulation in the First Amendment area: "Your liberty
- ends at the tip of my nose."
-
- As usual, the law lags well behind the development of technology. It is
- important to educate lawmakers and judges about new technologies, lest
- fear and ignorance of the new and unfamiliar, create barriers to free
- communication, expression, experimentation, innovation, and other such
- values that help keep a nation both free and vigorous.
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- The Fourth Amendment
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- The Fourth Amendment guarantees that "the right of the people to
- be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against
- unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no
- Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath
- or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be
- searched, and the persons or things to be seized."
-
- In short, the scope of the search has to be as narrow as
- possible, and there has to be good reason to believe that the
- search will turn up evidence of illegal activity.
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- The meaning of the Fourth Amendment's guarantee has evolved over time in
- response to changing technologies. For example, while the Fourth
- Amendment was first applied to prevent the government from trespassing
- onto private property and seizing tangible objects, the physical
- trespass rationale was made obsolete by the development of electronic
- eavesdropping devices which permitted the government to "seize" an
- individual's words without ever treading onto that person's private
- property. To put the matter more concretely, while the drafters of the
- First Amendment surely knew nothing about electronic databases, surely
- they would have considered one's database to be as sacrosanct as, for
- example, the contents of one's private desk or filing cabinet.
-
- The Supreme Court responded decades ago to these types of technological
- challenges by interpreting the Fourth Amendment more broadly to prevent
- governmental violation of an individual's reasonable expectation of
- privacy, a concept that transcended the narrow definition of one's
- private physical space. It is now well established that an individual
- has a reasonable expectation of privacy, not only in his or her home
- and business, but also in private communications. Thus, for example:
-
- % Government wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping are now limited
- by state and federal statutes enacted to effectuate and even to expand
- upon Fourth Amendment protections.
-
- % More recently, the Fourth Amendment has been used, albeit with
- limited success, to protect individuals from undergoing certain random
- mandatory drug testing imposed by governmental authorities.
-
- Advancements in technology have also worked in the opposite direction,
- to diminish expectations of privacy that society once considered
- reasonable, and thus have helped limit the scope of Fourth Amendment
- protections. Thus, while one might once have reasonably expected
- privacy in a fenced-in field, the Supreme Court has recently told us
- that such an expectation is not reasonable in an age of surveillance
- facilitated by airplanes and zoom lenses.
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- Applicability of Fourth Amendment to computer media
-
- Just as the Fourth Amendment has evolved in response to changing
- technologies, so it must now be interpreted to protect the reasonable
- expectation of privacy of computer users in, for example, their
- electronic mail or electronically stored secrets. The extent to which
- government intrusion into these private areas should be allowed, ought
- to be debated openly, fully, and intelligently, as the Congress seeks to
- legislate in the area, as courts decide cases, and as administrative,
- regulatory, and prosecutorial agencies seek to establish their turf.
-
- One point that must be made, but which is commonly misunderstood, is
- that the Bill of Rights seeks to protect citizens from privacy invasions
- committed by the government, but, with very few narrow exceptions, these
- protections do not serve to deter private citizens from doing what the
- government is prohibited from doing. In short, while the Fourth
- Amendment limits the government's ability to invade and spy upon private
- databanks, it does not protect against similar invasions by private
- parties. Protection of citizens from the depredations of other citizens
- requires the passage of privacy legislation.
-
- The Fifth Amendment
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- The Fifth Amendment assures citizens that they will not "be deprived of
- life, liberty, or property, without due process of law" and that private
- property shall not "be taken for public use without just compensation."
- This Amendment thus protects both the sanctity of private property and
- the right of citizens to be proceeded against by fair means before they
- may be punished for alleged infractions of the law.
-
- One aspect of due process of law is that citizens not be prosecuted for
- alleged violations of laws that are so vague that persons of reasonable
- intelligence cannot be expected to assume that some prosecutor will
- charge that his or her conduct is criminal. A hypothetical law, for
- example, that makes it a crime to do "that which should not be done",
- would obviously not pass constitutional muster under the Fifth
- Amendment. Yet the application of some existing laws to new situations
- that arise in the electronic age is only slightly less problematic than
- the hypothetical, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation plans to
- monitor the process by which old laws are modified, and new laws are
- crafted, to meet modern situations.
-
- One area in which old laws and new technologies have already clashed and
- are bound to continue to clash, is the application of federal criminal
- laws against the interstate transportation of stolen property. The
- placement on an electronic bulletin board of arguably propriety computer
- files, and the "re-publication" of such material by those with access to
- the bulletin board, might well expose the sponsor of the bulletin board
- as well as all participants to federal felony charges, if the U.S.
- Department of Justice can convince the courts to give these federal laws
- a broad enough reading. Similarly, federal laws protecting against
- wiretapping and electronic eavesdropping clearly have to be updated to
- take into account electronic bulletin board technology, lest those who
- utilize such means of communication should be assured of reasonable
- privacy from unwanted government surveillance.
-
- Summary
-
- The problem of melding old but still valid concepts of constitutional
- rights, with new and rapidly evolving technologies, is perhaps best
- summed up by the following observation. Twenty-five years ago there was
- not much question but that the First Amendment prohibited the government
- from seizing a newspaper's printing press, or a writer's typewriter, in
- order to prevent the publication of protected speech. Similarly, the
- government would not have been allowed to search through, and seize,
- one's private papers stored in a filing cabinet, without first
- convincing a judge that probable cause existed to believe that evidence
- of crime would be found.
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- Today, a single computer is in reality a printing press, typewriter, and
- filing cabinet (and more) all wrapped up in one. How the use and output
- of this device is treated in a nation governed by a Constitution that
- protects liberty as well as private property, is a major challenge we
- face. How well we allow this marvelous invention to continue to be
- developed by creative minds, while we seek to prohibit or discourage
- truly abusive practices, will depend upon the degree of wisdom that
- guides our courts, our legislatures, and governmental agencies entrusted
- with authority in this area of our national life.
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- For further information regarding The Bill of Rights please contact:
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- Harvey Silverglate
- Silverglate & Good
- 89 Broad Street, 14th Floor
- Boston, MA 02110
- 617/542-6663
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