This was January 2015, not forthcoming.

--
James S. Tyre
Law Offices of James S. Tyre
10736 Jefferson Blvd., #512
Culver City, CA 90230-4969
310-839-4114/310-839-4602(fax)
jst...@jstyre.com
Special Counsel, Electronic Frontier Foundation
https://www.eff.org

From: liberationtech [mailto:liberationtech-boun...@lists.stanford.edu] On 
Behalf Of Yosem Companys
Sent: Saturday, January 02, 2016 12:17 PM
To: Liberation Technologies
Cc: Richard Forno
Subject: [liberationtech] Stanford course: Surveillance Law

From: Richard Forno <rfo...@infowarrior.org>
FYI, my Stanford CIS colleague (a securitylegalgeek rockstar) is offering a 
6-week online course on surveillance law.  Well worth checking out, if you're 
able and/or interested!   -- rick

Surveillance Law

Learn how police and intelligence agencies can access your data, and how the 
law (might) protect you! Hackers, attorneys, and concerned citizens are all 
welcome.

6 weeks of study
1-3 hours/week
English
Jonathan Mayer / Stanford University

It’s easy to be cynical about government surveillance. In recent years, a 
parade of Orwellian disclosures have been making headlines. The FBI, for 
example, is hacking into computers that run anonymizing software. The NSA is 
vacuuming up domestic phone records. Even local police departments are getting 
in on the act, tracking cellphone location history and intercepting signals in 
realtime.

Perhaps 2014 is not quite 1984, though. This course explores how American law 
facilitates electronic surveillance—but also substantially constrains it. You 
will learn the legal procedures that police and intelligence agencies have at 
their disposal, as well as the security and privacy safeguards built into those 
procedures. The material also provides brief, not-too-geeky technical 
explanations of some common surveillance methods.

Course Syllabus

I. Introduction
We will begin with a brief overview of how surveillance fits into the American 
legal system. We will also discuss how surveillance issues can be litigated. 

II. The Basics of Surveillance Law
Next, we will review established police surveillance procedures. Using 
telephone technology as a simple starting point, we will work through various 
sorts of data that investigators might seek to access—and the constitutional 
and statutory safeguards on that data.

III. Applying Surveillance Law to Information Technology
Having learned the basics, we will turn to more modern technologies. We will 
discuss snooping on email, web browsing, and mobile phone location, as well as 
hacking into devices.

IV. Compelled Assistance to Law Enforcement
What happens when data is technically protected? In this section, we will talk 
about the government’s (limited) ability to mandate backdoors and to require 
decryption.

V. The Structure of Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Law
The law that applies to foreign intelligence activities runs parallel to the 
law that applies to police activities. We will compare the two systems of law 
and review key distinctions. The section places particular emphasis on Section 
215 of the USA PATRIOT Act, Section 702 of the FISA Amendments Act, and 
Executive Order 12333.

VI. Controversial NSA Programs
In the final section, we will review the conduct and legality of controversial 
National Security Agency programs. We will discuss in detail the domestic phone 
metadata program, PRISM, and “upstream” Internet monitoring.

< - >

https://www.coursera.org/course/surveillance

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It's better to burn out than fade away.

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