Kenosha How did the police manage to make arrests?

On August 23, 2020, police shot Jacob Blake four times in the back in Kenosha, Wisconsin - and within hours, the streets were filled with protesters.

The next morning the National Guard came and within the next week around 40 buildings were destroyed. Two people were then killed by a protester before order was restored.

The events of that week saw many of the tactics used by the authorities in response to the protests but have only just begun to surface.Kenosha

A series of six warrants (1 2 3 4 5 6), (some of which were announced by Forbes), show that Google's location services were used extensively to locate Android users in arson incidents.

Authorities targeted seven different geographical areas, seeking to identify anyone within those areas for periods of up to two hours.

Searching for location data for users in a specific area - called a geofence warrant - is a controversial practice that has spread in recent years.

In one incident in 2020, the data showed a cyclist as a suspect in the burglary of a house because he often passed by. Of course the technique is controversial, but it is particularly troubling when used in a mass protest, which inevitably scans innocent civilians along with suspected arsonists.

Η Lynch, υπεύθυνη του Street Level Surveillance project από το Frontier Foundation, αναφέρει ότι το γεγονός ότι η αστυνομία μπόρεσε να έχει έξι εντάλματα με ελάχιστες ερωτήσεις από τα δικαστήρια δείχνει πόσο επικίνδυνα μπορεί να είναι τα εντάλματα γεω fences.

"We know there were hundreds if not thousands of people in the area who took part in legal protests," Lynch said. "It is unconstitutional. "There should not have been such warrants supporting an investigation involving so many people."

As regards privacy advocates, warrants do not recognize the risk of accidental data collection.

"When you have an investigation that necessarily involves gathering information about the protests," says Brett Kaufman, an attorney at the Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project of Civil Liberty Union, “there should be protection to limit the collection of personal data by the Authorities and to allow the recording of disasters. Otherwise, you're just giving the government a blank slate."

The six warrants issued after Kenosha's protests differ significantly. The most specific request is based on a video and an eyewitness account of an arson attempt at the TCF bank, southwest of the city center. This information allowed the police to reduce the time to 22 minutes, when someone broke the window and threw Molotov cocktails.

The other warrants are very general, without direct witnesses, the police set up a two-hour and a barricade that covered most of the city center. This is a significant time, the busiest night of protest, in an area that was a natural meeting place for anyone who took to the streets that night.

It is worth noting that this is not the first time the technique has been used by the police. In May 2020, Minneapolis police used a similar technique to investigate the vandalism of a store during demonstrations sparked by the assassination of George Floyd.

Although many devices collect location data, Google has become a favorite target of authorities for geofencing warrants due to its data retention policy. . iOS stores location data in a more anonymous and ephemeral way, which makes it less accessible to court orders.

Google does not adopt something similar on Android because of the value of targeted ad data.

Let us now talk about the accuracy that the system offers:

The last pages of the warrants show that a specific procedure was applied by Google in an effort to address the privacy risks of the system.

In this context, Google first provides a set of location points, identified by time stamps and unique identifiers but without further identifiable information.

So once the authorities have this list in their hands, they can at their discretion identify "a subset of devices", and not a single device, that of the suspect, as stated in the warrant.

iGuRu.gr The Best Technology Site in Greecefgns

every publication, directly to your inbox

Join the 2.082 registrants.
kenosha, kenosha wisconsin, location data

Written by giorgos

George still wonders what he's doing here ...

Leave a reply

Your email address is not published. Required fields are mentioned with *

Your message will not be published if:
1. Contains insulting, defamatory, racist, offensive or inappropriate comments.
2. Causes harm to minors.
3. It interferes with the privacy and individual and social rights of other users.
4. Advertises products or services or websites.
5. Contains personal information (address, phone, etc.).