Obama is showing just how little he cares about the Fourth Amendment once again. He is urging Congress not to pass legislation that keeps federal eyes off e-mails and other electronic documents and files stored in this imaginary cloud that is the computing term of the year.
From Wired:
As the law stands now, the authorities may obtain cloud e-mail without a warrant if it is older than 180 days, thanks to the Electronic Communications Privacy Act adopted in 1986. At that time, e-mail left on a third-party server for six months was considered to be abandoned, and thus enjoyed less privacy protection. However, the law demands warrants for the authorities to seize e-mail from a person’s hard drive.
A coalition of internet service providers and other groups, known as Digital Due Process, has lobbied for an update to the law to treat both cloud- and home-stored e-mail the same, and thus require a probable-cause warrant for access. The Senate Judiciary Committee held a hearing on that topic Tuesday.
The companies — including Google, AOL and AT&T — maintain that the law should be changed to reflect that consumers increasingly access their e-mail on servers, instead of downloading it to their hard drives, as a matter of course.
But the Obama administration testified that imposing constitutional safeguards on e-mail stored in the cloud would be an unnecessary burden on the government. Probable-cause warrants would only get in the government’s way.
Now remember, this isn't the first time Obama has spit on the Fourth Amendment. You may remember Obama pushing for the right of the federal government to track Americans using their cell phones, claiming you give up all rights to privacy when you use a cell phone, and Obama also fought for legal immunity in wire tapping cases. Now he wants more power to read your e-mails and know what documents you are sending over the Internet.