Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Law-Enforcement”
When Law Enforcement Gets Cozy With AI: The Europol Problem
I’ve been following the privacy community discussions lately, and something caught my attention that’s been gnawing at me: Europol’s increasingly opaque relationships with AI companies. It’s one of those stories that doesn’t get nearly enough attention in mainstream media, but it should absolutely terrify anyone who cares about privacy and civil liberties.
The basic issue is this – Europe’s law enforcement agency has been cosying up with various AI companies behind closed doors, with very little transparency about what they’re doing, what data they’re sharing, or what capabilities they’re building. One comment I saw really hit the nail on the head: this explains why the push for initiatives like ChatControl and ProtectEU never seems to stop. It’s not just bureaucratic momentum; it’s institutional desire. Law enforcement agencies want these tools, and they’re not particularly fussed about democratic oversight getting in the way.
When Those Who Protect Us Become the Perpetrators: A Disturbing Tale of Privacy Violation
Looking through my phone this morning, scrolling past countless photos of my teenage daughter’s school events and family gatherings, I found myself thinking about digital privacy. Recent news about law enforcement officers sharing a woman’s private photos after an illegal phone search has left me feeling deeply unsettled.
The digital age has brought unprecedented challenges to our privacy. While most of us worry about hackers or corporate data breaches, there’s an equally concerning threat from those who are supposed to protect us. The incident where deputies accessed and shared a woman’s intimate photos without consequences isn’t just a violation of privacy - it’s an abuse of power that should shock anyone who values basic human dignity.