via Harvard Gazette Online
2 years ago
June 21, 2010
He is telling us to stop dreaming of oracular judges with perfect answers to simple constitutional questions. He is telling us, in other words, to grow up.
2 years ago
June 21, 20103 years ago
June 20, 20103 years ago
June 11, 20103 years ago
June 11, 2010
It’s not just the lawyers who are confused here. U.S. consumers, riled up by stories in mainstream media, seem to live under the misapprehensions that they have some legal right to privacy, or that the protection of personal information that can be enforced in courts against corporations. That is true in the E.U., but not in the U.S. The Constitutional “right to privacy” detailed in U.S. Supreme Court decisions of the last fifty years only applies to protections against government behavior. There is no Constitutional right to privacy that can be enforced against employers, business partners, corporations, parents, or anyone else.
3 years ago
June 11, 20103 years ago
June 8, 20103 years ago
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June 5, 20103 years ago
June 5, 2010
Researchers from Microsoft have come up with a sensor widget concept that provides alerts and lets users control and monitor exactly what other users see from their webcams, microphones, and other live data streams.