'Going Dark?': Cops Grab Vehicle Data To Identify A Murder Suspect
https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20210102/11101245982/going-dark-cops-grab-vehicle-data-to-identify-murder-suspect.shtml

All the cops in the federal shops say "going dark" is a thing. Local cops have 
much less to say about the issue, even though they've got as much at stake. The 
FBI can't be trusted to count its own inventory of "locked" devices, so how 
much of a problem encryption poses is still highly theoretical. Which is the 
way the FBI and DOJ want it.

We live in a golden age of surveillance. Much of it is self-enabled. Phones 
track users wherever they go, an unfortunate byproduct of remaining 
"connected." FOMO has turned dozens of phone apps into unstoppable data 
generators. In-home devices record conversations, track viewing habits, and 
record internet usage habits. Wearables provide even more location data, as 
well as tons of useful biometric info.

Any cop complaining about the "restraints" of device encryption just isn't 
using their imagination. Cloud services provide cops with backups of 
conversations they can't access from locked devices. Billions of data points 
harvested by apps, data brokers, and government contractors give cops tons of 
info that's escaped the protective measures device owners have deployed to 
protect their devices.

A recent report by NBC News shows yet another way cops are leveraging 
"always-on" information gathering  to round up criminal suspects, encryption be 
damned. Investigators hoping to solve the alleged murder of a Michigan resident 
turned to third parties to gather evidence, using collected data to build a 
case. The murder victim was dragged behind his vehicle by his neck, resulting 
in his violent death. His body was covered in abrasions and his skull had been 
"partially flattened."

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