Michigan Supreme Court To Decide If Government Can Warrantlessly Spy on You With Drones
The state court of appeals held previously that unconstitutionally collected evidence could still be used for civil enforcement.
The state court of appeals held previously that unconstitutionally collected evidence could still be used for civil enforcement.
Possibly changing the way we live just as profoundly as the internet did.
The Institute for Justice argues evidence from warrantless searches can’t be used for zoning enforcement.
If the combat mission is over in the Middle East, Biden should follow—and make permanent—more cautious drone guidelines.
Plus: Judge rejects "terrorism" label for January 6 defendant, dozens of abortion clinics have closed since June, FTC staff recommended against Meta lawsuit, and more...
"A future of bloodless global discipline is a chilling thing."
Surveillance clearly shows children nearby as strike was called on man mistaken for a terrorist.
Our drones still patrol the skies, and our tax dollars will be paying off the costs of failed nation-building for decades.
A new, heavily investigated report shows a Pentagon uninterested in correcting its deadly errors.
But those numbers don’t include Afghanistan, and that’s a problem.
In Stephenson's near-future novel, innovation, not legislation, is the best response to a changing climate.
According to the Pentagon, no crimes were committed.
The federal government and police are finding new ways to use drones to invade privacy.
Too often, the government punishes citizens who reveal the state's true behavior to their fellow Americans.
Multiple military authorizations are still intact and we've still got troops in Iraq and elsewhere. And that's not even counting the drone strikes.
Seven children were among the 10 killed.
An independent investigation hasn't turned up terrorist ties or explosives.
The deadly Sunday explosion is a reminder of the hundreds of civilians U.S. strikes have killed in Afghanistan.
Federal espionage laws are used once again to punish a whistleblower.
Baltimore kept tabs on citizens' movement across 90 percent of the city, without a warrant, to investigate crimes.
Should they be banned?
Technological innovation makes gathering visual land data easier and cheaper—and threatens an industry’s status quo.
An interesting Michigan appellate decision.
So a district court suggests in a challenge to a Texas statute that limits drone photography that "surveil[s]" private property—but that exempts similar surveillance by academics and certain others,
At the end of August, the FAA finally gave Amazon approval for its Prime Air drone delivery fleet.
Imagine skies filled with drones carrying kidneys and livers, on their way to save the lives of people awaiting transplants. The future is here!
The president promised that any attack by Iran against the United States would be met with a response "1,000 times greater in magnitude!"
America has been lagging behind other countries.
The president’s accidental vision of a war-free second term.
The government granted a temporary waiver allowing drone-based deliveries of medical supplies in North Carolina. That shouldn't end when the pandemic does.
Westport won’t be using tech to monitor people’s body temperatures or whether they’re properly social distancing.
But without specifying an actual cybersecurity risk, the policy comes off looking like a wasteful protectionist maneuver that will likely put human pilots back in riskier situations.
Killing the longtime chief of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard can't be good for avoiding another Middle Eastern war.
The Drone Integration and Zoning Act seeks to expand private property rights and give localities more say in airspace regulation.
The war on terror leaves more dead civilians in its wake.
Open warfare between Iran and Saudi Arabia would be far worse than this weekend's attacks.
Another intelligence analyst who leaked important information to the public is treated like a traitor.
Get food, coffee, medicine, and golf balls (if your aim is just that bad).
A soldier died in Afghanistan over the Thanksgiving holiday. Why are we still there?
If only the lessons of Vietnam, or even of Iraq, would actually stick.
Plus: why Gary Johnson will be good for the Senate, "toxic culture" at the TSA, the dismissal of an anti-FOSTA lawsuit, and a new economic freedom index.
Bilal Abdul Kareem has been nearly droned in Syria five times already. A federal judge agrees his lawsuit over the matter can proceed.
From DIY guns to designer drugs, classic-car parts, and human livers, 3D printing promises a dynamic and uncontrollable world.
Rahm Emanuel wants to do the thing that critics of drone surveillance fear most.
Obama's shamefully weak stab at transparency has been abandoned.
"We want people to come here and have a good time and to feel safe."