The Supreme Court's Real Technology Problem: It Thinks Carrying 2 Phones Means You're A Drug Dealer

from the how-can-it-judge-reasonableness dept

I spent a lot of the last week shaking my head at the commentary on the Supreme Court and its (lack of) technical expertise. Much of the criticism came in response to the oral arguments in Aereo, and broke down in two areas: it either misunderstood the nature of Supreme Court oral arguments and their transcripts, or mistook familiarity with a handful of Silicon Valley products with actual tech savviness.

But in a series of cases this week about law enforcement searches of cell phones, we caught a glimpse of the Supreme Court’s real technology problem. Here's what it comes down to: it's not essential that the Court knows specifics about how technology itself works—and as Timothy Lee argues, that might even tempt them to make technology-based decisions that don't generalize well. However, it is essential that the Court understands how people use technology, especially in areas where they're trying to elaborate a standard of what expectations are "reasonable."

So when Chief Justice Roberts suggests that a person carrying two cell phones might reasonably be suspected of dealing drugs, that raises major red flags. Not because of any special facts about how cell phones work, but because (for example) at least half of the lawyers in the Supreme Court Bar brought two cell phones with them to the courthouse that day. Should those attorneys (along with the many, many other people who carry multiple devices) reasonably expect less privacy because the Chief Justice is out of touch with that fact?

Contrast that with Justice Kagan’s point about storage location in the same argument. Justice Kagan suggested, correctly, that people don’t always know what is stored on their device and what is stored “in the cloud.” The actual answer to that question should be immaterial; the point is that it’s absurd for a person’s privacy interest to hinge on which hard drive private data is stored on.1 Instead, the important fact here, which Justice Kagan recognizes, is that the distinction between local and cloud storage just doesn’t matter to many people, and so it can’t be the basis of a reasonable-expectation-of-privacy test.

If you’re feeling less generous, you might take Justice Kagan’s point as evidence that she herself doesn’t know where her files are stored. And in fact, that’s probably true—but it’s not important. You don’t actually need to know much about file systems and remote storage to know that it’s a bad idea for the law to treat it differently.

That’s not to say that technical implementation details are never relevant. Relevant details, though, should (and almost always do) get addressed in the briefs, long before the oral argument takes place. They don’t usually read like software manuals, either: they’re often rich with analogies to help explain not just how the tech works, but what body of law should apply.

What can’t really be explained in a brief, though, is a community’s relationship with a technology. You can get at parts of it, citing authorities like surveys and expert witnesses, but a real feeling for what people expect from their software and devices is something that has to be observed. If the nine justices on the Supreme Court can’t bring that knowledge to the arguments, the public suffers greatly. Again, Justice Kagan seems to recognize this fact when she says of cell phones:

They're computers. They have as much computing capacity as laptops did five years ago. And everybody under a certain age, let’s say under 40, has everything on them.

Justice Kagan is not under 40, and might not have everything stored on a phone (or on an online service accessible through her phone). But that quote shows me that she at least knows where other people’s expectations are different. Chief Justice Roberts’s questions show me exactly the opposite.

The justices live an unusual and sheltered life: they have no concerns about job security, and spend much of their time grappling with abstract questions that have profound effects on this country’s law. But if they fail to recognize where their assumptions about society and technology break from the norm—or indeed, where they are making assumptions in the first place—we’re all in trouble.

Reposted from ParkerHiggins.net.

  1. That speaks to a need to revisit the sort-of ridiculous third-party doctrine, which Justice Sotomayor has suggested, but one battle at a time.
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Filed Under: 4th amendment, cloud, computing, mobile phones, privacy, reasonableness, supreme court, technology


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  1. identicon
    Baron von Robber, 1 May 2014 @ 12:23pm

    Does that mean...

    ...my boss, who makes me use a work phone, is the leader of a cartel?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  2. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:24pm

    Everyone who works for a living and has a company provided cellphone and a personal cellphone is now a drug dealer. Awesome.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  3. icon
    pixelpusher220 (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 12:24pm

    Shame

    they didn't ask for a show of hands in the frigging courtroom. I would bet Scalia's speaking fee to political groups that multiple people in the court room had multiple cell phones with them that very day.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  4. identicon
    gnudist, 1 May 2014 @ 12:27pm

    I'm so good at hiding my drugs I didn't even know I had any until justice Roberts tipped me off

    link to this | view in thread ]

  5. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:28pm

    Chief Justice Roberts and his trusted side-kick Justice Scalia two ignorant peas in a pod.

    Aren't lifetime appointments wonderful.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  6. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:32pm

    There is a reason that these guys wear clothes that have no fasteners and assistants to make sure that their head and arms go in the right holes.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  7. identicon
    DCL, 1 May 2014 @ 12:40pm

    Files vs access to the files

    The idea about privacy on a device should be about the idea that said device can be setup to easily give you ACCESS to the files regardless of if they are on your local device.

    When you think about it paper files in your house are protected because if you have them on your person you have access to them only if can reach them, not just because they exist in a particular place. If they are sensitive and you know somebody (police) are going to visit you hide them in a drawer (and they need a warrant to search for them).

    For devices and computers where is common to save passwords and logins that device now holds access to those files even if they are 'in a drawer'/app/folder/website.

    The expectation that my privacy starts at what is not visibly available is something that can be applied to the physical device in this case (no touching buttons or changing screens Mr Police man!). The idea of probable cause and destruction of evidence shouldn't trample over these privacy rights anymore than busting into a house is...oh wait.. military style police raids are a real thing...

    ummm... am going to go trade in my smart phone for a dumb flip phone now.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  8. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:41pm

    Re: Does that mean...

    No, it means you've always been a drug dealer!

    Didn't you know that the name of your company's product that you sell is street slang for "drugs"?

    Thanks to Justice Robert I finally know why so many random people in the street keep asking me "got some safety hazard software to sell"!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  9. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:42pm

    "justice scalia - you've observed different people from the people that i've observed"

    that's because he's an old sheltered technophobe with a 1770's mindset that (clearly) believes no one keeps sensitive information on a phone

    in reality, almost anyone who knowingly keeps sensitive information on a phone (drug dealers, government, and lawyers alike) will often use a different device for unrelated purposes as a matter of security.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  10. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:43pm

    Sign of a corrupt judge...

    Bases his "Legal Opinions" which may unfortunately become a "Legal Fact" based on stuff he has only seen in his LIMITED fucking reality!

    How is this asshole conservative? He is just another thinly covered Aristocrat acting like a responsible steward of Law and Justice!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  11. identicon
    Baron von Robber, 1 May 2014 @ 12:43pm

    Re: Re: Does that mean...

    Oh noes!

    I work for a Hospital, I must turn myself in!

    Oh the irony!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  12. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 12:50pm

    So, did anyone successfully inform the Justices that it's quite common for numerous professions to carry separate cell phones for work and personal usage?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  13. icon
    Chronno S. Trigger (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 12:57pm

    For a while I carried three cell phones with me every day. I must have been the king of drug dealers. Damn, I wish I had known. I would have asked for more money.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  14. identicon
    zip, 1 May 2014 @ 1:15pm

    same old, same old ...

    Before cellphones, the same thing was said about pagers. Anyone who went around carrying a pager (except perhaps a medical doctor or other hospital staff) simply had to be a drug dealer, since there was no other (valid) reason for why anyone would have a need to stay connected with the world. Normal everyday people just didn't carry pagers, or have any need to, so the thinking went.

    Before pagers, public pay telephones were used as tools of the drug trade, so something had to be done about them, in the name of the so-called "war on drugs". Therefore, many payphones were crippled so they could not receive incoming calls. You see, only a drug dealer would have any need to ever receive incoming calls on a payphone (or maybe a Mafia boss discussing "business"). And like today, the authorities decided that once criminals (and presumably primarily criminals) had been known to use a particular technology, a low-cost way of fighting crime would be to both restrict that technology, as well as profile people who used it as likely criminals.

    It's funny that even today, decades after drug dealers switched over to pagers and then throwaway cellphones, it seems most pay telephones (the few that are left) still don't have incoming phone numbers. The "war on drugs" has unleashed immense "collateral damage" on innocent people through its scorched-earth tactics, even decades later. Perhaps not unlike residual land mines left behind by a retreating army and forgotten about.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  15. icon
    Rikuo (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 1:17pm

    What happens if you have two mobile phones, a tablet and/or a laptop on your person?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  16. icon
    John Fenderson (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 1:17pm

    Re:

    My wife routinely carries three cellphones as well, due to the nature of her work. I'm pissed that she hasn't shared her drug stash with me now.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  17. icon
    Rikuo (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 1:19pm

    Re: same old, same old ...

    ...wait, are you telling me that all those movies I saw where someone rang a phone booth weren't true?
    HOLLYWOOD HAS LIED TO ME!!!!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  18. identicon
    Curmudgeon, 1 May 2014 @ 1:20pm

    When Scalia said, "You've observed different people from the people that I've observed," the lawyer should have said, "No shit. You need to get out, man."

    I think DOJ still issues Blackberries, which means that some of the gov't lawyers on the case probably have two phones.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  19. identicon
    John Cressman, 1 May 2014 @ 1:24pm

    Again... they need a test...

    I'm sorry, but the current court system is outdated and broken due to technology advancing faster than the judges desire to keep up.

    Justices need to be FORCED to recuse themselves if they don't understand the technology be discussed in case and then warned and removed if they fail.

    This is a good example of how out of touch these Justices are. 2 Phones isn't uncommon AT ALL. I do work for a hospital and some docs and nurses have 1 personal cell, 1 work cell and 1 on-call cell. And... while they DO deal in drugs - it's legit and prescribed. Well I hope so in the majority of cases.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  20. identicon
    Lurker Keith, 1 May 2014 @ 1:25pm

    the obvious that hasn't been said yet

    How many members of CONGRESS have mistresses they use a 2nd phone to communicate w/, so their wives won't find out?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  21. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 1:30pm

    (Laughter.)!

    Thanks Scalia! Once again proving that all anyone needs is two wires and a hardy telegraph for their communicatin' needs!

    link to this | view in thread ]

  22. icon
    Spaceman Spiff (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 1:58pm

    How many do I need?

    I worked for Nokia Mobile Phones (now Microsoft Devices), and I typically carry around 4 cell phones (or more) at any time. 1 for work, 1 for backup, 1 or more test phones, and my personal Android phone that Google gave me. So what does that make me? A terrorist?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  23. icon
    jupiterkansas (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 1:58pm

    I'm a drug dealer and I've only got one phone. I guess I'm doing it wrong.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  24. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 2:03pm

    Re: Shame

    Yes... but how many people in the court room were also drug dealers? Even though I'm sure many HAD multiple phones, I bet far fewer would have responded to a request for a show of hands after the drug dealer remark.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  25. icon
    Violated (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 2:24pm

    Well I currently have 3 phones. First is my main UK phone. Second my phone with a Philippines SIM. Then third is one I use with commercial companies meaning a disposable SIM if needed.

    3 phones = Drugs Lord status.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  26. icon
    beltorak (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 2:42pm

    Re:

    you are a drug dealer and a child porn peddler, obviously. care to up that to terrorist for having cash in your pocket, patriot?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  27. icon
    John Fenderson (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 2:42pm

    Re: Again... they need a test...

    As the article points out, this isn't even a problem of not being familiar with technology. It's not being familiar with society.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  28. identicon
    athe, 1 May 2014 @ 4:16pm

    Re:

    Based on the transcript, the lawyer would have been lucky to get out "No sh-" before being interrupted yet again...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  29. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 4:56pm

    Re:

    you are an International Drug Dealer .... respect

    link to this | view in thread ]

  30. icon
    Coyne Tibbets (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 6:59pm

    "Justice Kagan suggested, correctly, that people don't always know what is stored on their device and what is stored 'in the cloud.'"

    And by this, demonstrates her own issue with understanding the implications. Because whether or not the document is in the cloud or the phone is irrelevant, since the whole point of having it in the cloud is so that I can have it in my phone, in seconds, on demand.

    So there isn't really a distinction between cloud and phone; not a useful one, anyway.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  31. icon
    Danny (profile), 1 May 2014 @ 7:56pm

    This remark is just ignorant

    "So when Chief Justice Roberts suggests that a person carrying two cell phones might reasonably be suspected of dealing drugs..."


    My wife carries two cell phones: a personal one with a number she's had as long as I've known her; and a Blackberry her employer provided and requires she carry.

    Her employer? The US Federal Government.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  32. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 1 May 2014 @ 8:19pm

    Carrying two phones as a drug dealer is pointless. A customer calls the drug deal's phone that's he's using for incoming calls. Then the drug dealer turns around and redials that same number on his outgoing phone.

    Tell me, what sense does that make? How is that supposed to hide anything from call logs? All the police have to do is cross reference the incoming phone numbers, to see that someone immediately called back that incoming phone number, from a different phone.

    Then all law enforcement needs to do is run those two phone numbers through CO-TRAVELER, to see the geolocation movement details of those two cellphones always intersect with each other in the same areas.

    From there it's onto using parallel construction to build a case against the defendants, and it's game over.

    Law enforcement don't need to search a suspects cellphone to get all that information. That information is all logged in the phone companies' metadata databases. So the whole 'two cellphones = drug dealer' argument, is irrelevant.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  33. icon
    G Thompson (profile), 2 May 2014 @ 2:01am

    So I shouldn't bring my Business phone with dual sim, nor my personal phone with dual sim into the USA anytime soon then..

    Though then again maybe they couldn't charge me under double jeopardy. LOL

    link to this | view in thread ]

  34. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 2 May 2014 @ 4:20am

    Re:

    Obviously drug customers need to start carrying two phones, too.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  35. icon
    gorehound (profile), 2 May 2014 @ 7:19am

    SCOTUS the assbags who trashed our Voting system 3 times...............all to favor the big money creeps.

    2 phones = drug dealer

    KISS MY BUTT !

    link to this | view in thread ]

  36. identicon
    Just Another AnonymousmTrop, 2 May 2014 @ 8:10am

    I think I'm going to buy one of those bandoliers that hold extra clips of ammo and a bunch of cheap burner phones. I will then go down to the Supreme Court and do a little dance in front of the steps, preferably when this idiot is looking.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  37. identicon
    Michael, 2 May 2014 @ 9:07am

    Re: Re: Re: Does that mean...

    Hospitals dispense a lot of drugs. What side of this argument were you on?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  38. identicon
    Michael, 2 May 2014 @ 9:11am

    Re: the obvious that hasn't been said yet

    Apparently the same number that deal in drugs - which I am confident is higher than zero.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  39. icon
    John Fenderson (profile), 2 May 2014 @ 10:29am

    Re:

    I think the idea is that the drug dealer has one phone that is used for drug deals (the burner) and a second phone that is his personal phone, over which he conducts no illegal activity at all.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  40. identicon
    Anonymous, 2 May 2014 @ 7:16pm

    Remember on "Glee" when Santana thought Brody was a drug dealer? Turns out he was just a gigolo.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  41. identicon
    Matthew Wells Sanders, 4 May 2014 @ 5:25am

    Out of Touch

    Justice Scalia shows how out of touch he is with his comments about observing different people than his witness. Sadly, I believe him. Unfortunately, this merely underscores his raging incompetence to establish what would be "reasonable" since he does not actually have any sense of how the "Common American" lives. It is a shame that the American People cannot remove those Justices that fail to fulfil this crucial role as one leg in the three-legged-stool due to their complete lack of awareness, or perhaps compassion, of the lives of the average American.

    I submit that there should be a system by which the populace can move to impeach these clowns through popular vote...

    link to this | view in thread ]

  42. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 4 May 2014 @ 4:38pm

    They watched too much Breaking Bad.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  43. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 5 May 2014 @ 6:20am

    People under the age of 40 have "everything" on their cell phones? I call smell the odour of assumption. I also refuse to consider that someone under 40 has less files than can conceivably fit on a single cell phone.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  44. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 5 May 2014 @ 6:24am

    Re:

    Further, my grandfather, who died over 20 years ago, produced a total of 5.6GB of data in his lifetime, and this was in the days before personal computers. So far, in a mere 40 years, I have beaten my grandfathers data production total by a factor of around 20, and I don't even film anything.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  45. icon
    fairuse (profile), 6 May 2014 @ 10:21pm

    Burner phone baby

    You have a case of burners and NO popular mobile service. Now what are you? Criminal or a very private person?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  46. icon
    fairuse (profile), 6 May 2014 @ 10:25pm

    Re:

    And not enough Person of Interest.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  47. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 May 2014 @ 7:30pm

    Re:

    "I shouldn't bring my Business phone with dual sim, nor my personal phone with dual sim into the USA anytime soon then.."

    What? You have a dual SIM phone? Not only do you have the functionality of 2 phones, but you're trying to hide it by making it look like one phone. That's proof that you're not only a drug dealer, but likely a pedophile and terrorist as well. A trial would be a complete waste of time with you, since you're so obviously guilty. You're going to be total bug splat.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  48. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 May 2014 @ 7:36pm

    Re: Out of Touch

    "Justice Scalia shows how out of touch he is with his comments about observing different people than his witness. Sadly, I believe him".

    Must the people Scalia hangs with are just now getting their first dad-burn new-fangled cell phones. If land lines were good enough back in Benjamin Franklin's day, they should be good enough today.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  49. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 May 2014 @ 7:38pm

    Re: This remark is just ignorant

    "Her employer? The US Federal Government."

    See? The US Federal Government is one of the biggest drug dealers on the planet.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  50. identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 19 May 2014 @ 7:41pm

    Re:

    'When Scalia said, "You've observed different people from the people that I've observed," the lawyer should have said, "No shit. You need to get out, man."'

    I bet the thought went through his head.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  51. icon
    vancedecker (profile), 29 May 2014 @ 12:55am

    GEE YA THINK? So 90 year olds don't understand technology?!

    Well this comes a shock to me!

    A SHOCK!

    So, 90 year geriatric corpses who sit on the supreme court share characteristics with other 90 year old geriatrics in the general population in regards to technology issues? NO SHIT!

    We'll be living with the precedents made by these morons for decades.

    With that said, drug dealers do mostly have multiple phones. I don't anyone who has multiple phones, except possibly people who are forced to use certain phones for work.

    My dealer usually has a different phone every month, and only sends the new phone number to the 'good customers' and not the dime bag losers. That's why it's always important to only contact your dealer for large solid orders and not constantly bother them for with small exchanges. That's how I always get my dealers new number.

    link to this | view in thread ]

  52. icon
    vancedecker (profile), 29 May 2014 @ 1:11am

    Re:

    Could you please summarize for all the straight male, and 'straight acting' gay male readers out there?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  53. icon
    vancedecker (profile), 29 May 2014 @ 2:07pm

    Re: Re:

    So now downloading porn torrents is considered 'producing' data?

    link to this | view in thread ]

  54. icon
    Gwiz (profile), 29 May 2014 @ 2:10pm

    Re: Re: Re:

    So now downloading porn torrents is considered 'producing' data?


    Keeping it classy as usual I see, vance.

    link to this | view in thread ]


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