"The United States government has been secretly amassing a “large amount” of “sensitive and intimate information” on its own citizens, a group of senior advisers informed Avril Haines, the director of national intelligence, more than a year ago.
The size and scope of the government effort to accumulate data revealing the minute details of Americans’ lives are described soberly and at length by the director’s own panel of experts in a newly declassified report. Haines had first tasked her advisers in late 2021 with untangling a web of secretive business arrangements between commercial data brokers and US intelligence community members."
I thought that this was timely and relevant. Does federalization/decentralization solve these issues as we go into Web3? I’m newer to these ideas.
Can’t the government be taken to court for breaking the constitution?
Probably the interpretation of “reasonable expectations of privacy” doesn’t apply to stuff you do online in the same way it applies to stuff you do in your house with curtains drawn… bc the constitution is an out-of-date document
by who, though? Itself?
There have been <private person> v. United States lawsuits before iirc