The Telecom Digest
Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Copyright © 2022 E. William Horne. All Rights Reserved.
Volume 41 Table of Contents Issue 202
Wyden Reveals New Details About U.S. Customs and Border Protection's 'Egregious Violations' of Americans' Rights During Warrantless Electronic Device Searches
Ireland fines Instagram a record of more than $405 mln over children's data
Connecticut Forces Frontier To Stop Charging $7 'Internet Infrastructure Surcharge'
Cops Wanted to Keep Mass Surveillance App Secret; Privacy Advocates Refused
Message-ID: <20220918201206.GA349790@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 20:12:06 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com> Subject: [telecom] Wyden Reveals New Details About U.S. Customs and Border Protection's 'Egregious Violations' of Americans' Rights During Warrantless Electronic Device Searches In Letter to CBP, Wyden Reveals That Phones Searched At the Border Are Downloaded Into A Central Database, Where Information Can be Viewed for 15 Years By Thousands of Agents; Americans Are Not Fully Informed of Their Rights Before Device Searches Washington, D.C. - U.S. Senator Ron Wyden, D-Ore., today revealed new details about how U.S. Customs and Border Protection violates Americans' rights during warrantless searches of phones and other electronic devices, and called for immediate reforms. Wyden recently learned that when thousands of Americans' phones are searched at the border every year, their contents are downloaded into a central database, where information is held for 15 years and can be accessed by roughly 2,700 Department of Homeland Security employees, he wrote in a letter to CBP Commissioner Chris Magnus. Worse, these devices are searched without warrants, and travelers are often not informed of their rights before their phones are searched. https://tinyurl.com/4f6h8fbe -- (Please remove QRM from my email address to write to me directly)
Message-ID: <20220918203816.GA349937@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 20:38:16 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com> Subject: [telecom] Ireland fines Instagram a record of more than $405 mln over children's data DUBLIN, Sept 5 (Reuters) - Ireland's data privacy regulator has agreed to levy a record fine of 405 million euros ($402 million) against social network Instagram following an investigation into its handling of children's data, a spokesperson for the watchdog said. Instagram plans to appeal against the fine, a spokesperson for parent Meta Platforms Inc. said in an emailed statement. https://tinyurl.com/2p8etb4a ************************** Moderator's Note ************************** Google's "Currency Converter" shows 405 Million Euros as equivalent to 405,454,005.00 US Dollars as of 20:42Z on September 18.
Message-ID: <20220918205405.GA350136@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 20:54:05 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com> Subject: [telecom] Connecticut Forces Frontier To Stop Charging $7 'Internet Infrastructure Surcharge' by Revcb Friday Sep 02 2022 07:37 EDT Connecticut forces Frontier to stop charging $7 'Internet Infra- structure Surcharge'; also agrees to spend $42.5M to expand fiber deployment, improve customer service [arstechnica.com] https://tinyurl.com/nytd4n7x
Message-ID: <20220918211146.GA350195@telecomdigest.us> Date: Sun, 18 Sep 2022 21:11:46 +0000 From: Bill Horne <malQRMassimilation@gmail.com> Subject: [telecom] Cops Wanted to Keep Mass Surveillance App Secret; Privacy Advocates Refused Much is known about how the federal government leverages location data by serving warrants to major tech companies like Google or Facebook to investigate crime in America. However, much less is known about how location data influences state and local law enforcement investi- gations. It turns out that's because many local police agencies inten- tionally avoid mentioning the under-the-radar tech they use - sometimes without warrants - to monitor private citizens. As one Maryland-based sergeant wrote in a department email, touting the benefit of "no court paperwork" before purchasing the software, "The success lies in the secrecy." https://tinyurl.com/379kz9ba
End of The Telecom Digest for Tue, 20 Sep 2022
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