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The Volokh Conspiracy - Can Encryption create an expectation of privacy

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The Volokh Conspiracy - Can Encryption create an expectation of privacy
Topic: Politics and Law 4:59 am EDT, Sep  6, 2006

Does encrypting Internet communications create a reasonable expectation of privacy in their contents, triggering Fourth Amendment protection? At first blush, it seems that the answer must be yes: A reasonable person would surely expect that encrypted communications will remain private. In this paper, Professor Kerr explains why this intuitive answer is entirely wrong: Encrypting communications cannot create a reasonable expectation of privacy. The reason is that the Fourth Amendment regulates access, not understanding: no matter how unlikely it is that the government will successfully decrypt ciphertext, the Fourth Amendment offers no protection if it succeeds. As a result, the government does not need a search warrant to decrypt encrypted communications.

The Volokh Conspiracy - Can Encryption create an expectation of privacy



 
 
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