Forwarded from BlackBox (Security) Archiv
Investigation report: Mobile phone data extraction by police forces in England and Wales
After massive criticism, the English data protection authority has taken a close look at the topic of mobile phone evaluations. The result: The police take too much data from the phones and store it for too long - often without a legal basis.
The British data protection authority ICO criticises the way law enforcement agencies deal with the smartphones of victims in England and Wales. For the 64-page investigation report (PDF), the authority had consulted law enforcement agencies, civil society groups and victims' associations. The investigation was preceded by numerous complaints from individuals and a report by Privacy International.
Mobile phones now store a large part of our lives, from address books to private photos and our private communications. In addition to this data, which often extends over long periods of time, phones store much more: browser histories, geodata, used Wifi's, health data and often the passwords and access data of their owners. This makes the phone one of the most interesting data sources for law enforcement agencies today.
👉🏼 PDF:
https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/6953083/ICO-Phone-PD-Report.pdf
👉🏼 Digital stop and search: how the UK police can secretly download everything from your mobile phone
https://privacyinternational.org/report/1699/digital-stop-and-search-how-uk-police-can-secretly-download-everything-your-mobile
Read more 🇩🇪:
https://netzpolitik.org/2020/england-polizei-handyauswertung-untersuchung/
#surveillance #ICO #uk #police #PrivacyInternational #study #wales #netpolitics
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_ES
After massive criticism, the English data protection authority has taken a close look at the topic of mobile phone evaluations. The result: The police take too much data from the phones and store it for too long - often without a legal basis.
The British data protection authority ICO criticises the way law enforcement agencies deal with the smartphones of victims in England and Wales. For the 64-page investigation report (PDF), the authority had consulted law enforcement agencies, civil society groups and victims' associations. The investigation was preceded by numerous complaints from individuals and a report by Privacy International.
Mobile phones now store a large part of our lives, from address books to private photos and our private communications. In addition to this data, which often extends over long periods of time, phones store much more: browser histories, geodata, used Wifi's, health data and often the passwords and access data of their owners. This makes the phone one of the most interesting data sources for law enforcement agencies today.
👉🏼 PDF:
https://assets.documentcloud.org/documents/6953083/ICO-Phone-PD-Report.pdf
👉🏼 Digital stop and search: how the UK police can secretly download everything from your mobile phone
https://privacyinternational.org/report/1699/digital-stop-and-search-how-uk-police-can-secretly-download-everything-your-mobile
Read more 🇩🇪:
https://netzpolitik.org/2020/england-polizei-handyauswertung-untersuchung/
#surveillance #ICO #uk #police #PrivacyInternational #study #wales #netpolitics
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_DE
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_EN
📡@cRyPtHoN_INFOSEC_ES
Forwarded from War Noir
#Russia #Ukraine 🇷🇺🇺🇦: Another photo of the #British Sniper from #Wales 🏴 (combatant of #Ukrainian TDF) who fights against #Russian Forces.
This time he appears to be carrying a possible #Finnish 🇫🇮 Tikka T3x sniper rifle with MDT ACC Chassis System. A quite noteable hardware.
https://twitter.com/war_noir/status/1506011319665049602
This time he appears to be carrying a possible #Finnish 🇫🇮 Tikka T3x sniper rifle with MDT ACC Chassis System. A quite noteable hardware.
https://twitter.com/war_noir/status/1506011319665049602
The Weaponization of Law
Preface
For as long as I can remember, I have been struck by the gap between what we are told law is and what it actually does. We are taught that law is a shield, a safeguard, a neutral arbiter standing above politics and power. Yet history tells a different story - one in which legal systems repeatedly emerge as instruments of hierarchy, centralisation, and control.
This series traces that story from its earliest roots to the present day, within the context of the legal system of England and #Wales. It is not a nostalgic journey, nor a call to return to any earlier legal era. Every system of the past had its virtues and its failures. Instead, this is an exploration of the structure of law itself: how it forms, who it serves, and why it so often fails to deliver the justice it promises.
Part-1
https://open.substack.com/pub/clarewillsharrison/p/the-weaponisation-of-law
Part-2
https://open.substack.com/pub/clarewillsharrison/p/the-weaponisation-of-law-6b5
@lawyersoflight
#UK #Law
Preface
For as long as I can remember, I have been struck by the gap between what we are told law is and what it actually does. We are taught that law is a shield, a safeguard, a neutral arbiter standing above politics and power. Yet history tells a different story - one in which legal systems repeatedly emerge as instruments of hierarchy, centralisation, and control.
This series traces that story from its earliest roots to the present day, within the context of the legal system of England and #Wales. It is not a nostalgic journey, nor a call to return to any earlier legal era. Every system of the past had its virtues and its failures. Instead, this is an exploration of the structure of law itself: how it forms, who it serves, and why it so often fails to deliver the justice it promises.
Part-1
https://open.substack.com/pub/clarewillsharrison/p/the-weaponisation-of-law
Part-2
https://open.substack.com/pub/clarewillsharrison/p/the-weaponisation-of-law-6b5
@lawyersoflight
#UK #Law