Thursday, 21 March 2013

Bill to make email more private proposed

The Electronic Communications Privacy Act, passed in pre-Web 1986, does not require government investigators to have a search warrant when requesting access to old emails and messages stored online, providing less protection for them than, say, letters stored in a desk drawer or even messages saved on a computer's hard drive. An update to the law would change that, as proposed Tuesday by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont.
The Electronic Communications Privacy Act, passed in pre-Web 1986, does not require government investigators to have a search warrant when requesting access to old emails and messages stored online, providing less protection for them than, say, letters stored in a desk drawer or even messages saved on a computer's hard drive. An update to the law would change that, as proposed Tuesday by Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vermont.