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Advance Metadata Fair - The Retention and Disclosure of 4G, 5G and Social Media Location Information, for Law Enforcement and National Security, and the Impact on Privacy in Australia (Paperback, 1st ed. 2020)
Loot Price: R3,972
Discovery Miles 39 720
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Advance Metadata Fair - The Retention and Disclosure of 4G, 5G and Social Media Location Information, for Law Enforcement and National Security, and the Impact on Privacy in Australia (Paperback, 1st ed. 2020)
Series: Law, Governance and Technology Series, 44
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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This book outlines the legal powers of a major Western nation -
Australia - to collect and use location information. Mobile service
and social media service providers now have the ability to track,
record and store more precise location information. Unlike 4G, 5G
mobile communications require that cell towers and antennas be in
much closer proximity; as a result, the location data can reveal
more personal and sensitive information about individual citizens.
Despite this aspect, service providers are required to disclose the
data to the authorities, without the need for a judicial warrant.
This book was written from the perspective of big location data
software analytics, a capability that makes it possible to combine
various location data points to create a profile on a given
individual's movements, habits, and political, religious and
ideological orientation. In this regard, privacy is poorly
protected. The rationale used to justify the powers was enforcing
serious crimes - terrorism offences. Location data can now be
retained for at least two years and be collected to investigate
even minor offences. This can be done without the person being
reasonably suspected of a criminal offence - when the individual is
simply determined to be a person of interest. This poses legal
risks to vulnerable communities. And yet, such investigative
techniques are deemed lawful and reasonable. At a time when
national security is so broadly defined to include economic issues,
which in turn overlap with climate change and environmental
protection, these legal powers should be reassessed. The book
clarifies the complex rules that every citizen must know in order
to have agency. Further, it calls upon authorities to reflect and
to self-regulate, by making the conscious decision to surrender
some of their powers to review by the independent judiciary.
Without the requirement for a judicial warrant or judicial review,
the powers are unfairly broad. The book pursues an
interdisciplinary approach to assess the functionality of mobile
telecommunications in direct relation to law enforcement powers and
existing judicial precedents. Further, it offers a unifying
techno-legal perspective on a complex issue touching on modern
privacy law and communications technologies.
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