Electronic surveillance of mobile devices: understanding the mobile ecosystem and applicable surveillance law
Objektkategorie:
Elektronische Ressource
Person/Institution:
Verlag:
RAND
Ort:
Santa Monica, CA
Entstehungszeit:
2015
Sprache:
Englisch
Weitere Objektinformationen
Abstract:
Mobile phones, the networks they connect to, the applications they use, and the services they access all collect and retain enormous amounts of information that can be useful in criminal investigations. However, state and local law enforcement face two substantial challenges when accessing these data: (1) maintaining awareness of the sources and nature of commercial data available to an investigator and (2) determining the legal rules for access to these data. This report explores these issues and describes the development of a prototype tool, the Mobile Information and Knowledge Ecosystem (MIKE), intended to help law enforcement, commercial entities, and policy analysts explore the mobile ecosystem and understand the laws regulating law enforcement's use of data contained within the mobile ecosystem. The tool might also serve as a mechanism for sharing best practices in electronic surveillance
Mobile phones, the networks they connect to, the applications they use, and the services they access all collect and retain enormous amounts of information that can be useful in criminal investigations. However, state and local law enforcement face two substantial challenges when accessing these data: (1) maintaining awareness of the sources and nature of commercial data available to an investigator and (2) determining the legal rules for access to these data. This report explores these issues and describes the development of a prototype tool, the Mobile Information and Knowledge Ecosystem (MIKE), intended to help law enforcement, commercial entities, and policy analysts explore the mobile ecosystem and understand the laws regulating law enforcement's use of data contained within the mobile ecosystem. The tool might also serve as a mechanism for sharing best practices in electronic surveillance
Mobile phones, the networks they connect to, the applications they use, and the services they access all collect and retain enormous amounts of information that can be useful in criminal investigations. However, state and local law enforcement face two substantial challenges when accessing these data: (1) maintaining awareness of the sources and nature of commercial data available to an investigator and (2) determining the legal rules for access to these data. This report explores these issues and describes the development of a prototype tool, the Mobile Information and Knowledge Ecosystem (MIKE), intended to help law enforcement, commercial entities, and policy analysts explore the mobile ecosystem and understand the laws regulating law enforcement's use of data contained within the mobile ecosystem. The tool might also serve as a mechanism for sharing best practices in electronic surveillance
Objekttext:
Edward Balkovich, Don Prosnitz, Anne Boustead, Steven C. Isley
Includes bibliographical references (pages 49-52)
Includes bibliographical references (pages 49-52)
Zugriff und Nutzungsmöglichkeiten
Administrative Angaben
Datensatz angelegt am:
2023-04-13
Zuletzt geändert am:
2019-10-11
In Portal übernommen am:
2023-04-13
Feedback
Unsere Datensätze befinden sich in stetiger Weiterentwicklung. Wenn Sie zusätzliche Informationen zu diesem Objekt oder einen Fehler entdeckt haben, dann schreiben Sie uns. Informationen zum Datenschutz
Ähnliche Objekte
Entdecken Sie ähnliche Objekte. Über die Datenfelder können Sie die Objekte auswählen, die Sie interessieren. Sie können Ihre Suchfilter beibehalten oder deaktivieren.
Suchfilter berücksichtigen
-
Objektkategorie:
- 101136
-
Sprache:
- 166554