Police may have access to your online history
Posted on May 11, 2009
Filed Under New World Order, Police State Tactics | Leave a Comment
Ont. court’s ruling ‘serious step forward toward mass surveillance‘
TORONTO – An Ontario Superior Court ruling could open the door to police routinely using Internet Protocol addresses to find out the names of people online, without any need for a search warrant.
Justice Lynne Leitch found there is “no reasonable expectation of privacy” in subscriber information kept by Internet Service Providers, in a decision issued earlier this week.
The decision is binding on lower courts in Ontario and it is the first time a Superior Court level judge in Canada has ruled on whether there are privacy rights in this information that are protected by the charter. The ruling is a significant victory for police investigating crimes such as possession of child pornography, while privacy advocates warn there are broad implications even for law-abiding users of the Internet… MORE
Comments
Leave a Reply
![Reblog this post [with Zemanta]](http://img.zemanta.com/reblog_e.png?x-id=221211a1-efc8-4544-9ac9-c420910bae1e)

