• The person, houses, papers, and possessions, ELECTRONIC DATA, AND ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS of every person shall be secure from unreasonable searches and seizures. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • The right of individuals to be secure from unreasonable searches and seizures is fundamental and should be clearly addressed in our state's constitution," Runestead said in a statement when he introduced the measure. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • Practically speaking inclusion of electronic communications and data in the state's constitutional prohibition on unreasonable searches and seizures means state and local police in Michigan are now required to obtain a judicial warrant, supported by probable cause, before accessing cell phones and other electronic devices. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • During Trump's 10 months in office, reporters have been arrested or manhandled for shouting questions at federal government officials, and some have been subjected to equipment searches and seizures. (sabew.org)
  • She added that the CIA likely also breached the Fourth Amendment's ban on arbitrary searches and seizures, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, and an executive order that prohibits the CIA from carrying out domestic searches or surveillance. (wsws.org)
  • Along with this right is the fundamental right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures by government agencies. (port-orange.org)
  • All of us deserve basic protection against government searches and seizures that the Constitution provides, including requiring law enforcement to get a warrant before it can access our communications. (eff.org)
  • The right of citizens to be secure from unreasonable search and seizure is being violated. (thetrumpet.com)
  • Most law enforcement agencies won't discuss it, raising concerns among privacy advocates that it violates the Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which protects against unreasonable search and seizure. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • This bulk data collection breaks the Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. (thetrumpet.com)
  • The amendment added the following highlighted words to Article I Sec. 11 of the state constitution. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • As the ACLU pointed out in an article supporting the New Hampshire amendment , without protections explicitly enshrined in the state constitution, the right to electronic data privacy exists at the whims of state legislators. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • While a state constitutional amendment only binds state agencies and not the federal government, the amendment does take a step forward in protecting Michiganders from the ever-growing federal surveillance state. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • Passage of the amendment sets the foundation to limit state and local surveillance and minimize the amount of personal information collected and stored by state and local governments. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • President Donald Trump's attacks on the media pose serious obstacles to U.S. press freedom enshrined in the First Amendment to the Constitution. (sabew.org)
  • The problem, as I point out in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, is that increasing numbers of police officers are badly trained, illiterate when it comes to the Constitution, especially the Fourth Amendment, and, in some cases, willfully ignorant about the fact that they are supposed to be peacekeepers working for us, the taxpayer. (rutherford.org)
  • The apparent conflict between Prop. 22 -- a constitutional amendment -- and those parts of the constitution that were previously enacted has no clear endgame in California constitutional law. (cp-dr.com)
  • The Fourth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution protects Americans from random and arbitrary stops and searches. (aclu.org)
  • In 2013, it was revealed that DHS, the FBI, state and local law enforcement agencies, and the private sector were working together to conduct nationwide surveillance on protesters' First Amendment activities. (envirosagainstwar.org)
  • Once it is collected, the FBI currently can bypass the 4th Amendment requirement of a warrant and sift through these "incidental" non-targeted communications of Americans -- effectively using Section 702 as a "backdoor" around the constitution. (eff.org)
  • This amendment would not only forbid the DOJ from doing this activity, it would also send a powerful signal to the intelligence agency that Congress is serious about reform. (eff.org)
  • What the DOJ elides in protesting this narrow amendment is that the FBI has gotten used to searching through already collected communications of Americans -overbroadly collected for foreign intelligence purposes - for domestic law enforcement purposes. (eff.org)
  • Some may be vaguely aware that it is guaranteed by the first amendment to the Constitution because some of the very early settlers on this continent came in search of just this freedom, but their general attitude is one of indifference. (xenu-directory.net)
  • The proposed constitutional amendment would add privacy as a natural right and says law enforcement must secure a warrant before searching or seizing an individual's electronic data or electronic communications. (governing.com)
  • Gov. C.L. "Butch" Otter says Idahoans should vote no on the only statewide constitutional amendment on the November ballot. (localnews8.com)
  • The Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution and the Electronic Communications Privacy Act (ECPA) restrict the government's ability to force a provider to disclose user information. (google.com)
  • It started in 1791 when the Second Amendment to the US Constitution was ratified. (medscape.com)
  • In 2016 Russia's nationwide parliamentary elections included seats allocated for purportedly annexed Crimea, a move widely condemned by the international community and that contravened the Ukrainian constitution. (state.gov)
  • The National Security Agency ( nsa ) collected 151 million phone records in 2016. (thetrumpet.com)
  • It requires any Michigan government agency to obtain a search warrant in order to access a person's electronic data or electronic communication. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • No warrant to search any place or to seize any person or things OR TO ACCESS ELECTRONIC DATA OR ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS shall issue without describing them, nor without probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • For example, at border crossings (also called "ports of entry"), federal authorities do not need a warrant or even suspicion of wrongdoing to justify conducting what courts have called a "routine search," such as searching luggage or a vehicle. (aclu.org)
  • Similarly, Border Patrol cannot search vehicles in the 100-mile zone without a warrant or "probable cause" (a reasonable belief, based on the circumstances, that an immigration violation or crime has likely occurred). (aclu.org)
  • But it is not the purpose of 702 to save the FBI the trouble of getting a warrant (FISA or otherwise) for domestic investigations as the law and the Constitution requires before it collects needed information from the telecommunications and Internet service providers. (eff.org)
  • NEW YORK (AP): Civil rights lawyers and Democratic senators are pushing for legislation that would limit U.S. law enforcement agencies' ability to buy cellphone tracking tools to follow people's whereabouts, including back years in time, and sometimes without a search warrant. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • A proposed bill would amend the state constitution to include privacy as a natural right and would require that law enforcement obtain a warrant before searching or seizing electronic data or communications. (governing.com)
  • Together with the paragraph above, the government argues that any smartphone with the potential to be encrypted/wiped should automatically be relieved of warrant requirements. (techdirt.com)
  • The use of the equipment raises serious questions about eavesdropping without a warrant, particularly since recordings of passengers could be obtained and used by law enforcement agencies. (blogspot.com)
  • But at the same time they demand Congress renew this far-reaching spying power, officials are refusing to tell Americans how the government interprets this authority to sweep up and search their phone calls, emails, and other communications, all without a warrant. (nbcnews.com)
  • T he federal government has been collecting the phone records of United States citizens for years. (thetrumpet.com)
  • China's constitution also (rather ambiguously) provides for religious freedoms: Article 36 expressly states that "no state organ, public organization, or individual may compel citizens to believe in, or not believe in, any religion. (justsecurity.org)
  • Citizens vaguely sensed that such legislation without legislators and judging without judges rode roughshod over due process, the separation of powers, and indeed the Constitution and Bill of Rights that provides those precious barriers against tyranny. (city-journal.org)
  • When the Internal Revenue Service undertook to exercise a pocket veto on the free speech of conservative nonprofits, citizens understood that the administrative agencies' pretense of disinterested nonpartisanship was a lie, a mere mask for the exercise of tyrannical power in the one government function that James Madison wrote in The Federalist especially required the utmost impartiality. (city-journal.org)
  • In Consonance with the effort of the national government to inculcate to all the citizens of the Republic of the Philippines a strong sense of nationalism and respect for the law and the Philippine Constitution, all schools both public and private in all levels are enjoined to recite the Oath of allegiance to the Constitution during flag ceremonies in addition to the Panatang Makabayan. (gov.ph)
  • In many instances, a state has delegated its public health authority to county, parish, or municipal governments to examine, treat, and, in the event of certain contagious diseases, even quarantine citizens to protect the public health. (cdc.gov)
  • Using tax revenues for these purposes is consistent with both the taxes aim to promote the health of the people of Palau and the government's duty under the Constitution to provide healthcare for its citizens, including the most vulnerable members of society. (who.int)
  • That legislation, originally passed in 1954, establishes redevelopment agencies as creations of the state. (cp-dr.com)
  • The act is the enabling legislation for mass surveillance programs operated by the National Security Agency and other agencies. (breitbart.com)
  • Member States' law derives from various sources, in particular the constitution, the statutes or legislation (which can be adopted at national, regional or local level), and/or regulations by government agencies, etc. (europa.eu)
  • His Government was amending its domestic transplantation legislation in line with those principles. (who.int)
  • Relying exclusively on piecemeal statutes or search and seizure provisions written before the dawn of the internet is no way … to protect privacy. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • A constitutional crisis occurs when one branch of government is going after another. (thetrumpet.com)
  • Brazil is a constitutional, multiparty republic governed by a democratically elected government. (state.gov)
  • She warned that the agency's actions "may have undermined the constitutional framework essential to effective congressional oversight of intelligence activities or any other government function. (wsws.org)
  • According to the government, however, these basic constitutional principles do not apply fully at our borders. (aclu.org)
  • A constitutional problem arises, however, when we allow the Intelligence Community and domestic law enforcement to search and use the data collected on Americans without constitutional protections. (nbcnews.com)
  • A PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL MODEL FOR THE NEWSTATES OF AMERICA PREAMBLE So that we may join in common endeavors, welcome the future in good order, and create an adequate and self-repairing government - we, the people, do establish the Newstates of America, herein provided to be ours, and do ordain this Constitution whose supreme law it shall be until the time prescribed for shall have run. (beyondweird.com)
  • In accordance with The Openness of Local Government Bodies Regulations 2014 any matters considered under Part 1 business only of the meeting may be filmed, recorded, photographed, broadcast or reported via social media by any person. (threerivers.gov.uk)
  • g) Construction regulations relating to secure mental health treatment facilities under the jurisdiction of the Department of Children and Families shall be enforced exclusively by the department in conjunction with the Agency for Health Care Administration's review authority under paragraph (c). (fl.us)
  • We define police power as the inherent authority of the state (and, through delegation, local government) to enact laws and promulgate regulations to protect, preserve, and promote the health, safety, morals, and general welfare of the people. (cdc.gov)
  • The authority of federal and state governments to enact laws protecting public health extends to the promulgation of regulations, the issuance of executive orders, and the publication of directives from health authorities that may have the force and effect of law ( Box 13.1 ). (cdc.gov)
  • But even if amici were correct in their premise that threats from third parties cannot justify the search of a cell phone incident to arrest, they ignore the principal justification in the government's opening brief-the threat of passcode-locking and encryption-as well as newer "geofencing" technologies that will enable individuals to preset their phones to automatically wipe in certain circumstances. (techdirt.com)
  • But of course Obama, who had famously said that if you had a business, "you didn't build that"-it was the creation of society under government's direction-believed to his very marrow the Progressive-era idea that government had to be vastly more powerful than any mere individual citizen, who without its protection and direction had no defense against the vast might of the corporations that created American wealth. (city-journal.org)
  • The senato r said his anxiety about government surveillance was rooted in the findings of the Church Commission, the 1975 Senate select committee charged with reviewing the federal government's intelligence agencies. (breitbart.com)
  • The federal government's authority to protect public health and safety is found in the US Constitution. (cdc.gov)
  • Unsurprisingly, law enforcement agencies now routinely seize and search phones. (aclu.org)
  • However, just because the courts have permitted law enforcement agencies to search seized smart phones, that doesn't mean that youhave any obligation to make it easy for them . (aclu.org)
  • It is an outrage that data brokers are selling detailed location data to law enforcement agencies around the country - including in states that have made personal reproductive health decisions into serious crimes. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • Originally, these departments had broader responsibilities than do modern law-enforcement agencies, including some public health functions, so calling them police forces was more consistent with their original function than their current one. (cdc.gov)
  • Why do Americans know so little about the Constitution they claim to revere? (aclu.org)
  • It turns out that although most Americans (over three-quarters) say they are very proud of our Constitution, only five percent could accurately answer 10 basic questionsabout its contents. (aclu.org)
  • Federal border agents are stopping, interrogating, and searching Americans on an everyday basis with absolutely no suspicion of wrongdoing, and often in ways that our Constitution does not permit. (aclu.org)
  • But protecting Americans privacy is worth making the FBI follow the Constitution, even if it is a bit more effort. (eff.org)
  • Americans voted against the Left's contempt for the Constitution. (city-journal.org)
  • It was hard not to think of Thomas Jefferson's complaint in the Declaration of Independence that George III had "erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance"-so that the nation's 22 million government employees now outnumber Americans who work in manufacturing. (city-journal.org)
  • Section 702 is the part of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 , or FISA, and its various updates and revisions, that allows the federal government to monitor foreign individuals, along with specific targeting of Americans. (breitbart.com)
  • Senators Rand Paul and Ron Wyden: If nobody knows how many Americans' communications are being searched, we can't know the full impact on our liberty. (nbcnews.com)
  • If neither Congress nor the public knows how many Americans' communications are being searched, we can't know the full impact on Americans' liberty caused by these warrantless back-door searches. (nbcnews.com)
  • And a bill introduced by Sen. Ron Wyden that is now before Congress seeks to regulate the way government agencies can obtain data from data brokers and other private companies, at a time when privacy advocates worry location tracking could be put to other novel uses, such as keeping tabs on people who seek abortions in states where it is now illegal. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • Article 1, Section 8, of the US Constitution authorizes Congress to impose taxes to provide for "the general Welfare of the United States"[ b ] and to regulate interstate commerce. (cdc.gov)
  • The police power is the natural authority of sovereign governments to regulate private interests. (cdc.gov)
  • In order to address this challenge, the Government of India refined its rules to regulate depiction of tobacco products or their use in films and television programmes. (who.int)
  • Google's anticompetitive behavior, they allege, is too complicated for law enforcement officials in the U.S. and EU to devise adequate remedies to restore competitive markets to general and specialized search. (fairsearch.org)
  • For years, officials have refused to answer basic questions about how the government conducts surveillance. (nbcnews.com)
  • The fisa court has granted 99.9 percent of government surveillance requests," he said in a March 22 interview. (thetrumpet.com)
  • These surveillance tools make the U.S. government far more powerful than it was in the 1970s. (thetrumpet.com)
  • GILL: Well, the latest report is the Central Intelligence Agency was shadowing or putting under surveillance Congressman Claude Popper, Supreme Court Justice William 0. (cia.gov)
  • As technology has grown, so has government surveillance. (governing.com)
  • Utah Republican Sen. Mike Lee told Breitbart News that the unconfirmed reports that President Barack Obama's national security adviser Susan Rice unmasked the associates of President Donald Trump who were caught accidentally in surveillance operations confirmed to him the dangers of government snooping. (breitbart.com)
  • In investigations related to national security, the US government may use a National Security Letter (NSL) or one of the authorities granted under the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) to compel Google to provide user information. (google.com)
  • Intelligence agency leaders are waging an all-out public relations campaign in support of their favored surveillance authority, Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA), which expires at the end of this year. (nbcnews.com)
  • For more information: Coal Workers' Health Surveillance Program, Surveillance Branch, Respiratory Health Division, NIOSH, 1095 Willowdale Road, Morgantown, WV 26505 ( https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/cwhsp/default.html ). (cdc.gov)
  • Opinion: Geofence Warrants Violate NY's Constitution. (citylimits.org)
  • We fill a gap for underfunded and understaffed departments," he said in an email, adding that the company does not have access to people's personal information, nor are search warrants required. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • And six years ago, the court ruled that warrants are needed to search someone's cellphone without consent. (governing.com)
  • Google must be prohibited from threatening to exclude other sites entirely from its algorithmic search results, as it has done with TripAdvisor and Yelp, if they do not permit Google to use their proprietary content. (fairsearch.org)
  • This week, Congress will vote on the Commerce, Justice, Science and Related Agencies Appropriations bill (H.R. 4505). (eff.org)
  • A local occupation authority installed by the Russian government and led by Sergey Aksyonov as "prime minister" of the "state council of the republic of Crimea" administers occupied Crimea. (state.gov)
  • But he maintains that the governor's proposal amounts to a blatant violation of Prop. 22 and, he said, of the voters' intention of securing more funds for local governments. (cp-dr.com)
  • The reports collectively and broadly define extremists as individuals and groups "that are mainly antigovernment, rejecting federal authority in favor of state or local authority, or rejecting government authority entirely. (envirosagainstwar.org)
  • DHS has already distributed more than $50 million in grants to enable local police agencies to acquire license plate readers, which rely on mobile cameras to photograph and identify cars, match them against a national database, and track their movements. (envirosagainstwar.org)
  • and the role of state and local governments in licensing and. (colorado.gov)
  • d) Building plans approved under s. 553.77 (3) and state-approved manufactured buildings, including buildings manufactured and assembled offsite and not intended for habitation, such as lawn storage buildings and storage sheds, are exempt from local code enforcing agency plan reviews except for provisions of the code relating to erection, assembly, or construction at the site. (fl.us)
  • The governing bodies of local governments may provide a schedule of fees, as authorized by s. 125.56 (2) or s. 166.222 and this section, for the enforcement of the provisions of this part. (fl.us)
  • Respondents/affected entities: State and local governments. (justia.com)
  • Recognizing such changes, local, state, and federal governments have been writing laws about firearms for 2 centuries. (medscape.com)
  • The US government has entered its reply brief in the US vs. Wurie case and its argument in favor of warrantless searches of arrestees' cell phones contains some truly terrible suppositions. (techdirt.com)
  • Every argument in favor of warrantless searches contains some sort of lamentation about how tech-savvy criminals will be able to cover up or destroy evidence contained on their phones before the police can crack open these new-fangled address books and copy everything down. (techdirt.com)
  • The government argues that impartial technological advancements somehow favor criminals. (techdirt.com)
  • Article ii of the U.S. Constitution makes the president the chief of the executive branch. (thetrumpet.com)
  • The obscure proposal would amend the Idaho Constitution to allow lawmakers to reject rules created by executive branch agencies - otherwise known as a legislative veto. (localnews8.com)
  • The executive branch of state government shall be reorganized by transferring the specified agencies, programs, and functions to other specified departments, commissions, or offices. (flsenate.gov)
  • What's On Their Minds: Warrantless Inventory Search and Tow of a Legally Parked Car After the Arrest of an Occupant of the Car. (justia.com)
  • In 1975, Sen. Frank Church said, "If this government ever became a tyranny … the technological capacity that the intelligence community has given the government could enable it to impose total tyranny, and there would be no way to fight back, because the most careful effort to combine together in resistance to the government, no matter how privately it was done, is within the reach of the government to know. (thetrumpet.com)
  • The nation was almost at a point where the government could "impose total tyranny, and there would be no way to fight back," as Church said. (thetrumpet.com)
  • And while states address the protection of public health and safety in their individual constitutions, each state is also vested with "police powers," that is, inherent authority to impose restrictions on private rights for the sake of public welfare, order, and security. (cdc.gov)
  • I have asked for an apology and a recognition that this CIA search of computers used by its oversight committee was inappropriate," she said. (wsws.org)
  • Instead, we agree with the Marvin Ammori of 2010 in a paper for Free Press: "Government oversight, antitrust law and competition policy exist to ensure a fair marketplace for all business interests to the benefit of consumers and the economy. (fairsearch.org)
  • Two months later Ammori expanded on the necessity of government oversight, in an op-ed in The New York Times , saying "[t]oday, the Internet is the basic infrastructure of both commerce and communication…Discrimination on the Internet will undermine innovation on an evolving Web…If the government cannot preserve the Internet as a level playing field, it is because our political system is already a pay-for-privilege system. (fairsearch.org)
  • However, specific government oversight was needed to ensure their protection. (who.int)
  • Russian government agencies, including the Ministry of Internal Affairs, the Federal Security Service (FSB), the Federal Investigative Committee, and the Office of the Prosecutor General, applied and enforced Russian law in Crimea as if it were a part of the Russian Federation. (state.gov)
  • He said branches of the federal government may soon turn on each other. (thetrumpet.com)
  • Some government agencies have instructed employees not to speak to members of the press or have made federal data and statistics more difficult for journalists to obtain. (sabew.org)
  • The third largest federal agency behind the Departments of Veterans Affairs and Defense, the DHS - with its 240,000 full-time workers, $61 billion budget and sub-agencies that include the Coast Guard, Customs and Border Protection, Secret Service, Transportation Security Administration (TSA) and the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) - has been aptly dubbed a "runaway train. (envirosagainstwar.org)
  • Federal government websites often end in .gov or .mil. (dol.gov)
  • Before sharing sensitive information, make sure you're on a federal government site. (dol.gov)
  • c) In addition to the requirements of s. 553.79 and this section, facilities subject to the provisions of chapter 395 and parts II and VIII of chapter 400 shall have facility plans reviewed and construction surveyed by the state agency authorized to do so under the requirements of chapter 395 and parts II and VIII of chapter 400 and the certification requirements of the Federal Government. (fl.us)
  • Facilities subject to the provisions of part IV of chapter 400 may have facility plans reviewed and shall have construction surveyed by the state agency authorized to do so under the requirements of part IV of chapter 400 and the certification requirements of the Federal Government. (fl.us)
  • Field epidemiology-including investigation of disease outbreaks and clusters-is a critical, basic government function conducted by public health agencies at the state and federal levels. (cdc.gov)
  • Both federal and state authorities are subject to the limitations and restraints of the US Constitution. (cdc.gov)
  • Although the provisions in the US Constitution are broad, the activities of the federal government relating to health and welfare nonetheless must fit within these enumerated powers. (cdc.gov)
  • This article discusses critical issues and opportunities going forward in nanotechnology environmental, health, and safety (nanoEHS) research from the perspective of Federal Government Agency participants in the United States (U.S.) National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) interagency Nanotechnology Environmental and Health Implications Working Group (NEHI). (cdc.gov)
  • NEHI is responsible for coordination of Federal Science Agency nanoEHS research. (cdc.gov)
  • and Division of Coal Mine Workers' Compensation, or Federal Black Lung Program at http://www.dol.gov/owcp/dcmwc/index.htm . (cdc.gov)
  • Some still argue that individuals need guns to protect against encroachments of civil liberties by the federal government. (medscape.com)
  • And unsurprisingly, the campaign appears to violate China's constitution, despite its oft-ambiguous wording. (justsecurity.org)
  • Brown's office, however, maintains that Prop. 22 does not infringe on the Legislature's right to create and disband redevelopment agencies as it sees fit, per Article XVI, Section 16 of the State Constitution. (cp-dr.com)
  • The government also elides that what it wants is to take advantage of Section 702's massive well-documented over-collection to have a kind of time machine. (eff.org)
  • Site Map (Combination + M): Shortcut for site map (footer agency) section of the page. (gov.ph)
  • The CM has been proposed and promoted during the WHO FCTC needs assessment, which was jointly undertaken by the Secretariat of the WHO FCTC and the Government of Palau on 5-7 October 2011. (who.int)
  • On May 18, 14-year-old Joao Pedro Matos Pinto sought shelter in his home in Rio de Janeiro State's municipality of Sao Goncalo as a police helicopter circled above his neighborhood of Salgueiro, searching for a suspect. (state.gov)
  • The governor has thus far been unyielding in his effort to eliminate the state's redevelopment agencies. (cp-dr.com)
  • They didn't want to be bossed around by the Environmental Protection Agency about what they could do on their own private property, as if filling in a hole on land 50 miles from the nearest navigable waterway fell under the EPA's purview. (city-journal.org)
  • What device packed with private information like emails, photos and call history can be seized and searched without a court order? (aclu.org)
  • In an extraordinary speech delivered Tuesday on the floor of the US Senate, the chair of the Senate Intelligence Committee, Dianne Feinstein, accused the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) of spying on committee staff members conducting an investigation into the agency's program of detention, interrogation and torture under President George W. Bush. (wsws.org)
  • Kashmiri people's hopes rest with India's Supreme Court, which is set to begin hearings in early November on petitions challenging the validity of the abrogation of Article 370 of the constitution, which gave a special status to Kashmir. (dawn.com)
  • Police agencies have been using the platform to search hundreds of billions of records gathered from 250 million mobile devices, and hoover up people's geolocation data to assemble so-called "patterns of life," according to thousands of pages of records about the company. (thefrontierpost.com)
  • The accessibility of these certificates was exploited by many, including a new type of search service that extracts people's data from public registers compiles it and publishes it online, available for everyone to access. (lu.se)
  • a) Examination questions and answer sheets of examinations administered by a governmental agency for the purpose of licensure, certification, or employment are exempt from s. 119.07 (1) and s. 24(a), Art. (flsenate.gov)
  • The ACLU pointed to a bipartisan congressional report to demonstrate the true nature of government fusion centers: "They haven't contributed anything meaningful to counterterrorism efforts. (tenthamendmentcenter.com)
  • The campaign, questionably framed by the Chinese government as a counterterrorism operation, violates a half dozen international treaties, along with China's own constitution . (justsecurity.org)
  • But it doesn't speak about whether or not the Legislature has the authority to end redevelopment," said Marianne O'Malley, director of General Government at the nonpartisan Legislative Analyst's Office. (cp-dr.com)
  • Society's increasing reliance on technology allows companies to collect vast amounts of personal data, track one's movement, purchases and associations, and sell or provide that data to government organizations and private companies. (governing.com)
  • It is a Committee of government, semi-government, ministries, agencies, civil society organizations and private sector that will facilitate and coordinate efforts to combat the occurrences and impacts of Non-Communicable Disease in the Republic of Palau. (who.int)
  • From Angola to Zimbabwe, CDC's presence is felt in over 40 countries worldwide through partnerships with international and multinational public health agencies and nongovernmental organizations. (cdc.gov)
  • Adjustments must also be made to meet the varied requirements of vital statistics offices, hospitals of different types, medical services of the armed forces, social insurance organizations, sickness surveys, and numerous other agencies. (cdc.gov)
  • The project works with the Honduran Government, industry, and other stakeholders to build the Ministry of Labor's capacity to help ensure remediation of labor law violations related to freedom of association and the right to organize and bargain collectively. (dol.gov)
  • however, they were implemented in 2012 after several rounds of consultations and detailed deliberations with Ministry of Information and Broadcasting, which is the implementing agency for the rules. (who.int)
  • If you are looking for such implementing measures, by which the Member States have incorporated certain provisions of EU law, then you can use the relevant search function at the EUR-Lex database. (europa.eu)
  • That's why Rappeneau, a law student, is supporting a bill sponsored by Rep. Margaret O'Neil, a Democrat from Saco, that seeks to explicitly grant the right to privacy in the Maine Constitution. (governing.com)
  • Feinstein directly accused the CIA of violating the US Constitution, specifically its core principle of the separation of powers between the various branches of government. (wsws.org)
  • An Indian soldier stands guard as the Indian flag flies atop the government secretariat in Srinagar on Thursday. (dawn.com)
  • A fundamental right guaranteed by the Constitution of the United States to all who live in this nation is the right to equal protection under the law. (port-orange.org)
  • This dedicated corps of executives share a commitment to public service and democratic values grounded in the fundamental ideals of our Constitution. (cdc.gov)
  • In practice, however, Border Patrol agents often do not limit themselves to brief immigration inquiries and regularly conduct criminal investigations and illegal searches at checkpoints. (aclu.org)
  • One of the state legal institutions designed to combat corruption in government and management bodies and in the field of economic activity is the prosecutor's office. (lu.se)
  • If Gov. Jerry Brown gets his way in the Legislature in the coming days, he and the state will face a conundrum to make a Zen master's head spin: Is it illegal to transfer funds from agencies that no longer exist? (cp-dr.com)
  • This sub-subparagraph is subject to the Open Government Sunset Review Act in accordance with s. 119.15 and shall stand repealed on October 2, 2011, unless reviewed and saved from repeal through reenactment by the Legislature. (flsenate.gov)
  • To review and recommend changes to Rule 14 of the Council Constitution (Appendices 1, 2 and 3 refers). (threerivers.gov.uk)
  • To review Rule 15 of the Council Constitution on Questions from the Public (Appendix 4). (threerivers.gov.uk)
  • This rule provided the framework of Clean Air Act (CAA) requirements for air agencies to meet in attainment plans to achieve the 1997 PM2.5 NAAQS in designated nonattainment areas. (justia.com)
  • On March 23, 2015, the EPA proposed a new implementation rule (80 FR 15340) consistent with the attainment planning requirements under CAA subparts 1 and 4 of part D, title I, that would apply to ongoing implementation efforts by air agencies in areas designated nonattainment for the 1997 and 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS, as well as to new efforts in areas recently designated nonattainment for the most recent 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS. (justia.com)
  • As part of its proposed implementation rule, the EPA also proposed a new ICR to cover the 3year period after the ICR is approved by OMB, which would account for both the burden associated with plan revisions related to ongoing implementation efforts for the 1997 and 2006 PM2.5 NAAQS as well as the additional cost burden to air agencies developing attainment plans for areas designated nonattainment for the 2012 PM2.5 NAAQS. (justia.com)
  • An agency may not conduct or sponsor and a person is not required to respond to a collection of information unless it displays a currently valid OMB control number. (justia.com)
  • Private law or civil law is the area of law in a society that affects the relationships between individuals or groups without the intervention of the state or government. (europa.eu)
  • Government forces were on Thursday on high alert to prevent anti-India protests or armed attacks, though no incidents were reported until noon. (dawn.com)
  • GOI (government of India) has left Kashmiris in the lurch & shown disregard for their rights. (dawn.com)
  • Indeed, as the following list shows, just about every nefarious deed, tactic or thuggish policy advanced by the government today can be traced back to the DHS, its police state mindset, and the billions of dollars it distributes to police agencies in the form of grants. (envirosagainstwar.org)
  • Feinstein, a Democrat from California, spoke for an hour and reviewed in considerable detail the multi-year effort of the CIA to impede the committee's investigation by withholding and removing access to documents, lying, and illegally penetrating and searching the computers of committee staffers working on the probe. (wsws.org)
  • Google must be forced to end its anticompetitive practices, and not allowed to benefit from its illegally obtained scale and revenue per search advantages, or to use those advantages to deny other general and specialized search engines from obtaining the scale necessary to compete viably. (fairsearch.org)