mvweebles
Guru
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2019
- Messages
- 7,759
- Location
- United States
- Vessel Name
- Weebles
- Vessel Make
- 1970 Willard 36 Trawler
Of course electronic surveillance can find out extremely intimate details about you, but cannot be done (legally) without a search warrant. There was a landmark case several years ago where an incredibly successful hacker was caught. He had been extremely careful and only used burner phones and hotspots. It took him a while of rotting in jail waiting for trial go figure out they caught him using highly specialized equipment designed for military use that carpets a small area (couple square blocks) for all cell calls and intercepts data streams. Highly illegal surveillance without a specific search warrant.Key is “indiscriminate “. Same issue applies to anyone with a cellphone. The cellphone doesn’t even need to have GPS. Peter they can find out which side you dress on.
I agree with your intent totally. Especially given your car records your speed of travel and location. Your phone and your Alexa can record your conversations . Your keystrokes are potentially available. Big supporter of privacy given a somewhat libertarian slant to my thinking. Europeans and Brits seem to do a somewhat better job on this than us. With less chest thumping and more structural limitations to the invasion of privacy.
Go to London and try to find a place to piss on a wall without a camera watching.
There's a difference between what can be done, and what can be done legally. Requiring a common citizen to broadcast a tracking signal for law enforcement without probable cause would stretch the boundaries. Although larger vessels are required to broadcast AIS, it is the vessel under surveillance, though obviously the vessels command would be backtracked in the event of an infraction.
Peter