Mnaotaka kuhama tiGO mhame, ila wako sahihi kwani kokote duniani Maslahi ya Taifa yako juu ya haki za mtu binafsi

Siye siyo wa kwanza kubishana juu ya haki za mtu binafsi zinapoishia ili kupisha maslahi ya taifa. Suala hili limeibuka kwenye kesi ya Mbowe baada ya shahidi kutoka Tigo kutoa ushahidi kutokana na taarifa alizozitoa kwenye mfumo wao. Tigo wako sahihi kutumika maslahi ya Tiafa kuliyo ya Mbowe na wenzake.​


BRIA 19 4 a The Patriot Act: What Is the Proper Balance Between National Security and Individual Rig​


Soon after September 11, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft brought before Congress a list of recommended changes in the law to combat terrorism. Some of these measures had long been opposed by members of Congress as infringing on the rights of Americans.
But September 11 had swept away all previous objections. The U.S. Senate quickly passed the USA PATRIOT ACT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism). Only one senator, Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), voted against it.
The next day, the House of Representatives passed the bill 357-66. The final bill was 342 pages long and changed more than 15 existing laws. Most of the Justice Department's recommendations were incorporated into it, but several provisions will expire in 2005.
On October 26, President George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act into law. He praised the "new tools to fight the present danger . . . a threat like no other our Nation has ever faced." He also asserted that the Patriot Act "upholds and respects the civil liberties guaranteed by our Constitution."
The Patriot Act defines "domestic terrorism" as activities within the United States that . . . involve acts dangerous to human life that. . . appear to be intended—

The Patriot Act and Privacy

Some of the most controversial parts of the Patriot Act surround issues of privacy and government surveillance. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . ." It requires law-enforcement officers to obtain warrants before making most searches. To get a warrant, officers must make sworn statements before a judge "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." The judge may only issue a search warrant if officers show "probable cause" that the person is engaged in criminal activity. Federal law requires that officers report to the court on the results of the search.
Surveillance such as wiretaps and physical searches requires officers to prove "probable cause" of criminality. Even before the Patriot Act, there were exceptions under federal law.
One was for so-called "pen-trap" orders. To obtain from a telephone company the numbers dialed to and from a particular telephone, officers must get a pen-trap order from a judge. They do not need to show probable cause, but must certify that the information is needed for an ongoing criminal investigation. The reason for the lesser standard is that these records are far less intrusive than wiretaps and physical searches.
Another major exception was for matters before the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Court. Congress created the court in 1978 following scandals revealing that U.S. intelligence agencies had spied on hundreds of thousands of American citizens, most notably the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
The court was a compromise between those who wanted to leave U.S. intelligence agencies free from any restrictions and those who wanted intelligence agencies to apply for search warrants like other law-enforcement agencies. Congress required U.S. intelligence agencies (the FBI and National Security Agency) to apply for warrants for wiretaps and other surveillance on foreign governments and suspected foreign agents. But because the agencies are not investigating domestic crime, they do not have to meet the probable cause standard. They only have to certify that the purpose of the investigation is to track a foreign government or agent. They do not have to report to the court on the results of the surveillance. The court meets in secret with only government representatives present and has never denied an intelligence agency's application for a search warrant.
The Patriot Act expands all these exceptions to the probable-cause requirement. Section 215 of the act permits the FBI to go before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for an order to search for "any tangible things" connected to a terrorism suspect. The order would be granted as long as the FBI certifies that the search is "to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities [spying]." But the FBI would not need to meet the stronger standard of probable cause.
The Patriot Act now authorizes this court to issue search orders directed at any U.S. citizen who the FBI believes may be involved in terrorist activities. Such activities may, in part, even involve First Amendment protected acts such as participating in non-violent public protests.
In Section 215, "any tangible things" may include almost any kind of property—such as books, documents, and computers. The FBI may also monitor or seize personal records held by public libraries, bookstores, medical offices, Internet providers, churches, political groups, universities, and other businesses and institutions.
The Patriot Act prohibits third parties served with Section 215 orders such as Internet providers and public librarians to inform anyone that the FBI has conducted a search of their records.
Section 216 of the Patriot Act extends pen-trap orders to include e-mail and web browsing. The FBI can ask Internet service providers to turn over a log of the web sites a person visits and the addresses of e-mail coming to and from the person's computer.
Another area of concern is Section 213 of the Patriot Act. It authorizes so-called "sneak-and-peek" searches for all federal criminal investigations. When applying for a search warrant, officers may show that there is "reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification . . . may have an adverse result." If the judge approves, then the FBI can delay notifying a citizen about the search for a "reasonable period." Thus, the FBI may search a citizen's home or business in secret. The FBI says these searches may be necessary to prevent the destruction of evidence or to keep from jeopardizing an ongoing secret investigation.

The Debate Over the Patriot Act

According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, four states (Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont) and 364 cities, towns and counties have passed resolutions protesting provisions of the Patriot Act. In response to criticism of the act, Congress may be having some second thoughts. The House of Representatives voted 309-118 to repeal "sneak-and-peek" searches. In the Senate, Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) have introduced the Rights of Individuals Act. This is a comprehensive bill, addressing a number of issues related to the Patriot Act. One part of the Murkowski-Wyden bill would limit "sneak and peek" searches. Those whose homes or offices had been searched under "sneak and peek" would have to be notified within seven calendar days.
Attorney General Ashcroft and other Americans defend the Patriot Act. "We are at war," Ashcroft says, "and we have to do things differently than we did before." He points out that the only purpose of the Patriot Act is "to prevent terrorists from unleashing more death and destruction." Ashcroft also argues that the courts and Congress still safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans.
Public opinion has consistently supported the Patriot Act. An August 2003 Gallup Poll asked whether the Patriot Act goes too far, is about right, or doesn't go far enough in restricting people's civil liberties. Only 22 percent responded that it goes too far. Forty-eight percent said it is about right, and 21 percent answered that it does not go far enough.
In June 2003, the attorney general called for another law to further strengthen the powers of law enforcement to fight terrorists. Called "Patriot Act II" by critics, the proposed new law would, among other things, enable the government to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists.
The courts are just beginning to review the constitutionality of the Patriot Act. In the first major legal challenge to the Patriot Act, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit in July 2003 against Section 215 searches. The suit argues that these searches violate the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures as well as First Amendment freedoms of speech and association.
In a report called "Unpatriotic Acts," the ACLU warned that American freedom was endangered by the Patriot Act:

In a Washington Post opinion piece, Heather MacDonald, a writer at the Manhattan Institute, defended the Patriot Act. She countered the ACLU by stressing that Section 215 requires a court order. She said there was no reason for anyone to feel "afraid to read books" or "terrified into silence." "Were that ever the case, it would be thanks to the misinformation spread by advocates and politicians, not because of any real threat posed by" the Patriot Act.
It will be quite some time before cases like the ACLU lawsuit will reach the U.S. Supreme Court. The basic question that the court will have to answer is: What is the proper balance between national security and protecting individual rights?

For Discussion and Writing

  1. How does the Patriot Act define "domestic terrorism"? Do you think participants in public protests could ever be accused of "domestic terrorism" under this definition? Why or why not?
  2. The Justice Department has proposed that the government should be able to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists. Do you support the proposal? Why or why not?
  3. Below are two famous quotations. What do they mean? Which, if any, do you agree with? Explain.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.—Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)
There is danger that, if the [Supreme Court] does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.—Justice Robert H. Jackson dissenting in Terminiello v. City of Chicago (1949)

For Further Information

Patriot Act Background

Text of the Patriot Act
Library Records Post Patriot Act A chart showing the legal requirements for intercept orders, search warrants, pen/trap orders, and subpoenas. By Mary Minow, an attorney and former librarian.
A Guide to the Patriot Act By Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turner, Slate Magazine.
BeSpacific: Patriot Act Entries on the Patriot Act from a legal web log.
Wikipedia: USA PATRIOT Act
PBS

Critics of the Patriot Act

What's So Patriotic About Trampling on the Bill of Rights? By Nancy Chang, Center for Constitutional Rights.
ACLU: USA Patriot Act
American Library Association: USA PATRIOT Act
Electronic Frontier Foundation: USA Patriot Act
Electronic Privacy Information Center: The USA PATRIOT Act
USA Patriot Act & Intellectual Freedom A PowerPoint presentation by Carrie Lybecker, Liza Rognas, and Carlos Diaz of Evergreen State College.

Defenders of the Patriot Act

The Proven Tactics in the Fight against Crime A September 2003 speech by Attorney General John Ashcroft defending the Patriot Act from its critics.
Questions and Answers About the USA PATRIOT ACT From the U.S. Department of Justice.
Preserving Life and Liberty A Justice Department defense of the Patriot Act.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Orrin Hatch, U.S. senator from Utah.
A Letter To Congress: The Patriot Act Is Vital To Protecting National Security From Americans for Victory Over Terrorism.
Ndiyo maana njia ya haja kubwa inaitwa Tigo.
 
February of 2016, Apple publicly refused to comply with the Federal order,citing the protection of
2 customers’data from “hackers and criminals” and noting that they even “put that data out of our own reach" because it is none of our business.

Kiufupi ni kwamba hauwezi kutatua tatizo kwa kutengeneza tatizo jingine ndio maana Apple wameweka mfumo wa kuhifadhi taarifa ambapo hata wao hawawezi kuzipata hizo taarifa za mteja ili kuondoa mgongano kati ya Public interests and Safety with the Public privacy and human rights
Mkuu Apple walitoa data na kuwasidia FBI kuzitumia kimyume cha watu wengi wanavyodhania
 

Siye siyo wa kwanza kubishana juu ya haki za mtu binafsi zinapoishia ili kupisha maslahi ya taifa. Suala hili limeibuka kwenye kesi ya Mbowe baada ya shahidi kutoka Tigo kutoa ushahidi kutokana na taarifa alizozitoa kwenye mfumo wao. Tigo wako sahihi kutumika maslahi ya Tiafa kuliyo ya Mbowe na wenzake.​


BRIA 19 4 a The Patriot Act: What Is the Proper Balance Between National Security and Individual Rig​


Soon after September 11, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft brought before Congress a list of recommended changes in the law to combat terrorism. Some of these measures had long been opposed by members of Congress as infringing on the rights of Americans.
But September 11 had swept away all previous objections. The U.S. Senate quickly passed the USA PATRIOT ACT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism). Only one senator, Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), voted against it.
The next day, the House of Representatives passed the bill 357-66. The final bill was 342 pages long and changed more than 15 existing laws. Most of the Justice Department's recommendations were incorporated into it, but several provisions will expire in 2005.
On October 26, President George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act into law. He praised the "new tools to fight the present danger . . . a threat like no other our Nation has ever faced." He also asserted that the Patriot Act "upholds and respects the civil liberties guaranteed by our Constitution."
The Patriot Act defines "domestic terrorism" as activities within the United States that . . . involve acts dangerous to human life that. . . appear to be intended—

The Patriot Act and Privacy

Some of the most controversial parts of the Patriot Act surround issues of privacy and government surveillance. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . ." It requires law-enforcement officers to obtain warrants before making most searches. To get a warrant, officers must make sworn statements before a judge "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." The judge may only issue a search warrant if officers show "probable cause" that the person is engaged in criminal activity. Federal law requires that officers report to the court on the results of the search.
Surveillance such as wiretaps and physical searches requires officers to prove "probable cause" of criminality. Even before the Patriot Act, there were exceptions under federal law.
One was for so-called "pen-trap" orders. To obtain from a telephone company the numbers dialed to and from a particular telephone, officers must get a pen-trap order from a judge. They do not need to show probable cause, but must certify that the information is needed for an ongoing criminal investigation. The reason for the lesser standard is that these records are far less intrusive than wiretaps and physical searches.
Another major exception was for matters before the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Court. Congress created the court in 1978 following scandals revealing that U.S. intelligence agencies had spied on hundreds of thousands of American citizens, most notably the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
The court was a compromise between those who wanted to leave U.S. intelligence agencies free from any restrictions and those who wanted intelligence agencies to apply for search warrants like other law-enforcement agencies. Congress required U.S. intelligence agencies (the FBI and National Security Agency) to apply for warrants for wiretaps and other surveillance on foreign governments and suspected foreign agents. But because the agencies are not investigating domestic crime, they do not have to meet the probable cause standard. They only have to certify that the purpose of the investigation is to track a foreign government or agent. They do not have to report to the court on the results of the surveillance. The court meets in secret with only government representatives present and has never denied an intelligence agency's application for a search warrant.
The Patriot Act expands all these exceptions to the probable-cause requirement. Section 215 of the act permits the FBI to go before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for an order to search for "any tangible things" connected to a terrorism suspect. The order would be granted as long as the FBI certifies that the search is "to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities [spying]." But the FBI would not need to meet the stronger standard of probable cause.
The Patriot Act now authorizes this court to issue search orders directed at any U.S. citizen who the FBI believes may be involved in terrorist activities. Such activities may, in part, even involve First Amendment protected acts such as participating in non-violent public protests.
In Section 215, "any tangible things" may include almost any kind of property—such as books, documents, and computers. The FBI may also monitor or seize personal records held by public libraries, bookstores, medical offices, Internet providers, churches, political groups, universities, and other businesses and institutions.
The Patriot Act prohibits third parties served with Section 215 orders such as Internet providers and public librarians to inform anyone that the FBI has conducted a search of their records.
Section 216 of the Patriot Act extends pen-trap orders to include e-mail and web browsing. The FBI can ask Internet service providers to turn over a log of the web sites a person visits and the addresses of e-mail coming to and from the person's computer.
Another area of concern is Section 213 of the Patriot Act. It authorizes so-called "sneak-and-peek" searches for all federal criminal investigations. When applying for a search warrant, officers may show that there is "reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification . . . may have an adverse result." If the judge approves, then the FBI can delay notifying a citizen about the search for a "reasonable period." Thus, the FBI may search a citizen's home or business in secret. The FBI says these searches may be necessary to prevent the destruction of evidence or to keep from jeopardizing an ongoing secret investigation.

The Debate Over the Patriot Act

According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, four states (Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont) and 364 cities, towns and counties have passed resolutions protesting provisions of the Patriot Act. In response to criticism of the act, Congress may be having some second thoughts. The House of Representatives voted 309-118 to repeal "sneak-and-peek" searches. In the Senate, Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) have introduced the Rights of Individuals Act. This is a comprehensive bill, addressing a number of issues related to the Patriot Act. One part of the Murkowski-Wyden bill would limit "sneak and peek" searches. Those whose homes or offices had been searched under "sneak and peek" would have to be notified within seven calendar days.
Attorney General Ashcroft and other Americans defend the Patriot Act. "We are at war," Ashcroft says, "and we have to do things differently than we did before." He points out that the only purpose of the Patriot Act is "to prevent terrorists from unleashing more death and destruction." Ashcroft also argues that the courts and Congress still safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans.
Public opinion has consistently supported the Patriot Act. An August 2003 Gallup Poll asked whether the Patriot Act goes too far, is about right, or doesn't go far enough in restricting people's civil liberties. Only 22 percent responded that it goes too far. Forty-eight percent said it is about right, and 21 percent answered that it does not go far enough.
In June 2003, the attorney general called for another law to further strengthen the powers of law enforcement to fight terrorists. Called "Patriot Act II" by critics, the proposed new law would, among other things, enable the government to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists.
The courts are just beginning to review the constitutionality of the Patriot Act. In the first major legal challenge to the Patriot Act, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit in July 2003 against Section 215 searches. The suit argues that these searches violate the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures as well as First Amendment freedoms of speech and association.
In a report called "Unpatriotic Acts," the ACLU warned that American freedom was endangered by the Patriot Act:

In a Washington Post opinion piece, Heather MacDonald, a writer at the Manhattan Institute, defended the Patriot Act. She countered the ACLU by stressing that Section 215 requires a court order. She said there was no reason for anyone to feel "afraid to read books" or "terrified into silence." "Were that ever the case, it would be thanks to the misinformation spread by advocates and politicians, not because of any real threat posed by" the Patriot Act.
It will be quite some time before cases like the ACLU lawsuit will reach the U.S. Supreme Court. The basic question that the court will have to answer is: What is the proper balance between national security and protecting individual rights?

For Discussion and Writing

  1. How does the Patriot Act define "domestic terrorism"? Do you think participants in public protests could ever be accused of "domestic terrorism" under this definition? Why or why not?
  2. The Justice Department has proposed that the government should be able to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists. Do you support the proposal? Why or why not?
  3. Below are two famous quotations. What do they mean? Which, if any, do you agree with? Explain.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.—Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)
There is danger that, if the [Supreme Court] does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.—Justice Robert H. Jackson dissenting in Terminiello v. City of Chicago (1949)

For Further Information

Patriot Act Background

Text of the Patriot Act
Library Records Post Patriot Act A chart showing the legal requirements for intercept orders, search warrants, pen/trap orders, and subpoenas. By Mary Minow, an attorney and former librarian.
A Guide to the Patriot Act By Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turner, Slate Magazine.
BeSpacific: Patriot Act Entries on the Patriot Act from a legal web log.
Wikipedia: USA PATRIOT Act
PBS

Critics of the Patriot Act

What's So Patriotic About Trampling on the Bill of Rights? By Nancy Chang, Center for Constitutional Rights.
ACLU: USA Patriot Act
American Library Association: USA PATRIOT Act
Electronic Frontier Foundation: USA Patriot Act
Electronic Privacy Information Center: The USA PATRIOT Act
USA Patriot Act & Intellectual Freedom A PowerPoint presentation by Carrie Lybecker, Liza Rognas, and Carlos Diaz of Evergreen State College.

Defenders of the Patriot Act

The Proven Tactics in the Fight against Crime A September 2003 speech by Attorney General John Ashcroft defending the Patriot Act from its critics.
Questions and Answers About the USA PATRIOT ACT From the U.S. Department of Justice.
Preserving Life and Liberty A Justice Department defense of the Patriot Act.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Orrin Hatch, U.S. senator from Utah.
A Letter To Congress: The Patriot Act Is Vital To Protecting National Security From Americans for Victory Over Terrorism.
It requires law-enforcement officers to obtain warrants before making most searches. To get a warrant, officers must make sworn statements before a judge "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." The judge may only issue a search warrant if officers show "probable cause" that the person is engaged in criminal activity. Federal law requires that officers report to the court on the results of the search. SIDHANI KAMA KUNA ANAYEPINGA HILO KWA USALAM WETU LAKINI UTARATIBU ANGALAU UWE MZURI KIDOGO, UNAONA WENZETU WALIVYOBORESHA UTARATIBU, MPAKA UISHAWISHI MAHAKAMA. KWETU SISI NAONA HATA UKIKWARUZANA NA OFFICER GROCERY, KESHO YAKE ANAAMKIA TIGO KUOMBA TAARIFA ZAKO. neeyo BAGOSHAAAA!!!!
 
Umekopi masheria ya marekani unayamwaga humu bila kuzingatia muktadha.

Kila jambo lina muktadha wake. Acha ukasuku.
 
Ingekuwa Nchi Mbele Leo Asubuhi Mauzo Ya Tigo Yangetilisika Ila Home Sweet Home Wanaficha
 

Apple vs. FBI Case Study​

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  2. Markkula Center for Applied Ethics
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  4. Business Ethics
  5. Business Ethics Resources
  6. Apple vs. FBI Case Study

Ann Skeet and Markkula Center Staff
In the wake of the December 2015 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, attention turned to the perpetrator’s iPhone. A federal judge asked Apple, maker of the iPhone, to provide “reasonable technical assistance” to the FBI in accessing the information on the phone with that hope of discovering additional threats to national security.
Apple provided the FBI with data it had in their possession and sent Apple engineers to advise the FBI, but refused to comply with the court order to bypass the phone’s security measures: specifically the 4-digit login code and a feature that erases all data after ten incorrect attempts. The FBI argued that the bypass could only be used for this phone, this one time. The agency also cited national security concerns, given the phone may lead to better understanding the attack and preventing further incidents.
Apple CEO Tim Cook issued a public letter reiterating Apple’s refusal to cooperate. Cook advocated for the benefits of encryption in society to keep personal information safe. He stated that creating the backdoor entry into the iPhone would be akin to creating a master key capable of accessing the tens of millions of iPhones in the U.S. alone. Cook also had concerns that the FBI was outstepping its bounds - by using the court system to expand its authority - and believed the case should be settled after public debate and legislative action through Congress instead.
Public opinion polls on the issue were split. A number of major tech firms filed amicus briefs in support of Apple. The White House and Bill Gates stood behind the FBI. In anticlimactic fashion, the FBI withdrew its request a day before the hearing, claiming it no longer needed Apple’s help to assess the phone. It is speculated that an Israeli tech firm, Cellebrite, helped the FBI gain assess.
Nadhani hii kesi inafanana na kesi ya Jamiiforum na Jamhuri
 
Umekopi masheria ya marekani unayamwaga humu bila kuzingatia muktadha.

Kila jambo lina muktadha wake. Acha ukasuku.
Afadhali sheria je nyie mnaopeleka kila mzungu mahahakami mnasema ni afisa wa ubalozi
 
Vingereza viiiingi mataga mna shida sana , walioendelea hawana muda wa kuhangaika na privacy za watu na kuwarekodi kama kina January makamba na Kinana etc, wale wanahangaika na real threat za ukweli sio maagizo ya kutoka Chato ati watu wafuatiliwe wanamsemaje malaika mkuu, stupid kabisa nyinyi. Bandiko na kinachoendelea na alichofanya mwanasheria wa kwa mpalange havina uhusiano wowoteee, unarukaruka tu mleta uzi
 
Umesoma hiyo "article" ukaielewa!!?
AppleInc walikataa kuwapa FBI wanachokitaka,wakataka mahakama ndiyo iamue,FBI wakaomba kuteendelea tena na hilo swala la kupata msaada wa AppleInc kwani walishafanikisha walichokuwa wanakihitaji,lakini bila msaada wa AppleInc.
Hii ina uhusiano gani na afande comte kwenda Tigo kuomba taarifa za bwana wake comte kwa sababu tu ya wivu!?

Apple vs. FBI Case Study​

  1. Home
  2. Markkula Center for Applied Ethics
  3. Focus Areas
  4. Business Ethics
  5. Business Ethics Resources
  6. Apple vs. FBI Case Study

Ann Skeet and Markkula Center Staff
In the wake of the December 2015 terrorist attack in San Bernardino, attention turned to the perpetrator’s iPhone. A federal judge asked Apple, maker of the iPhone, to provide “reasonable technical assistance” to the FBI in accessing the information on the phone with that hope of discovering additional threats to national security.
Apple provided the FBI with data it had in their possession and sent Apple engineers to advise the FBI, but refused to comply with the court order to bypass the phone’s security measures: specifically the 4-digit login code and a feature that erases all data after ten incorrect attempts. The FBI argued that the bypass could only be used for this phone, this one time. The agency also cited national security concerns, given the phone may lead to better understanding the attack and preventing further incidents.
Apple CEO Tim Cook issued a public letter reiterating Apple’s refusal to cooperate. Cook advocated for the benefits of encryption in society to keep personal information safe. He stated that creating the backdoor entry into the iPhone would be akin to creating a master key capable of accessing the tens of millions of iPhones in the U.S. alone. Cook also had concerns that the FBI was outstepping its bounds - by using the court system to expand its authority - and believed the case should be settled after public debate and legislative action through Congress instead.
Public opinion polls on the issue were split. A number of major tech firms filed amicus briefs in support of Apple. The White House and Bill Gates stood behind the FBI. In anticlimactic fashion, the FBI withdrew its request a day before the hearing, claiming it no longer needed Apple’s help to assess the phone. It is speculated that an Israeli tech firm, Cellebrite, helped the FBI gain assess.
soMa
 
Toa namba kesho nije na "print - out" ya vyote ufanyavyo kwa hiyo namba,ndiyo utaona ujinga wa kutofuata sheria,kanuni na taratibu (bila court order).
Unasema usalama mie siogopi namuogopa Mungu na Mungu anajua yote. Ukweli ni huu kwa mpangilio wetu maslahi ya taifa yko juu ya kila kitu.
 

Siye siyo wa kwanza kubishana juu ya haki za mtu binafsi zinapoishia ili kupisha maslahi ya taifa. Suala hili limeibuka kwenye kesi ya Mbowe baada ya shahidi kutoka Tigo kutoa ushahidi kutokana na taarifa alizozitoa kwenye mfumo wao. Tigo wako sahihi kutumika maslahi ya Tiafa kuliyo ya Mbowe na wenzake.​


BRIA 19 4 a The Patriot Act: What Is the Proper Balance Between National Security and Individual Rig​


Soon after September 11, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft brought before Congress a list of recommended changes in the law to combat terrorism. Some of these measures had long been opposed by members of Congress as infringing on the rights of Americans.
But September 11 had swept away all previous objections. The U.S. Senate quickly passed the USA PATRIOT ACT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism). Only one senator, Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), voted against it.
The next day, the House of Representatives passed the bill 357-66. The final bill was 342 pages long and changed more than 15 existing laws. Most of the Justice Department's recommendations were incorporated into it, but several provisions will expire in 2005.
On October 26, President George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act into law. He praised the "new tools to fight the present danger . . . a threat like no other our Nation has ever faced." He also asserted that the Patriot Act "upholds and respects the civil liberties guaranteed by our Constitution."
The Patriot Act defines "domestic terrorism" as activities within the United States that . . . involve acts dangerous to human life that. . . appear to be intended—

The Patriot Act and Privacy

Some of the most controversial parts of the Patriot Act surround issues of privacy and government surveillance. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . ." It requires law-enforcement officers to obtain warrants before making most searches. To get a warrant, officers must make sworn statements before a judge "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." The judge may only issue a search warrant if officers show "probable cause" that the person is engaged in criminal activity. Federal law requires that officers report to the court on the results of the search.
Surveillance such as wiretaps and physical searches requires officers to prove "probable cause" of criminality. Even before the Patriot Act, there were exceptions under federal law.
One was for so-called "pen-trap" orders. To obtain from a telephone company the numbers dialed to and from a particular telephone, officers must get a pen-trap order from a judge. They do not need to show probable cause, but must certify that the information is needed for an ongoing criminal investigation. The reason for the lesser standard is that these records are far less intrusive than wiretaps and physical searches.
Another major exception was for matters before the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Court. Congress created the court in 1978 following scandals revealing that U.S. intelligence agencies had spied on hundreds of thousands of American citizens, most notably the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
The court was a compromise between those who wanted to leave U.S. intelligence agencies free from any restrictions and those who wanted intelligence agencies to apply for search warrants like other law-enforcement agencies. Congress required U.S. intelligence agencies (the FBI and National Security Agency) to apply for warrants for wiretaps and other surveillance on foreign governments and suspected foreign agents. But because the agencies are not investigating domestic crime, they do not have to meet the probable cause standard. They only have to certify that the purpose of the investigation is to track a foreign government or agent. They do not have to report to the court on the results of the surveillance. The court meets in secret with only government representatives present and has never denied an intelligence agency's application for a search warrant.
The Patriot Act expands all these exceptions to the probable-cause requirement. Section 215 of the act permits the FBI to go before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for an order to search for "any tangible things" connected to a terrorism suspect. The order would be granted as long as the FBI certifies that the search is "to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities [spying]." But the FBI would not need to meet the stronger standard of probable cause.
The Patriot Act now authorizes this court to issue search orders directed at any U.S. citizen who the FBI believes may be involved in terrorist activities. Such activities may, in part, even involve First Amendment protected acts such as participating in non-violent public protests.
In Section 215, "any tangible things" may include almost any kind of property—such as books, documents, and computers. The FBI may also monitor or seize personal records held by public libraries, bookstores, medical offices, Internet providers, churches, political groups, universities, and other businesses and institutions.
The Patriot Act prohibits third parties served with Section 215 orders such as Internet providers and public librarians to inform anyone that the FBI has conducted a search of their records.
Section 216 of the Patriot Act extends pen-trap orders to include e-mail and web browsing. The FBI can ask Internet service providers to turn over a log of the web sites a person visits and the addresses of e-mail coming to and from the person's computer.
Another area of concern is Section 213 of the Patriot Act. It authorizes so-called "sneak-and-peek" searches for all federal criminal investigations. When applying for a search warrant, officers may show that there is "reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification . . . may have an adverse result." If the judge approves, then the FBI can delay notifying a citizen about the search for a "reasonable period." Thus, the FBI may search a citizen's home or business in secret. The FBI says these searches may be necessary to prevent the destruction of evidence or to keep from jeopardizing an ongoing secret investigation.

The Debate Over the Patriot Act

According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, four states (Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont) and 364 cities, towns and counties have passed resolutions protesting provisions of the Patriot Act. In response to criticism of the act, Congress may be having some second thoughts. The House of Representatives voted 309-118 to repeal "sneak-and-peek" searches. In the Senate, Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) have introduced the Rights of Individuals Act. This is a comprehensive bill, addressing a number of issues related to the Patriot Act. One part of the Murkowski-Wyden bill would limit "sneak and peek" searches. Those whose homes or offices had been searched under "sneak and peek" would have to be notified within seven calendar days.
Attorney General Ashcroft and other Americans defend the Patriot Act. "We are at war," Ashcroft says, "and we have to do things differently than we did before." He points out that the only purpose of the Patriot Act is "to prevent terrorists from unleashing more death and destruction." Ashcroft also argues that the courts and Congress still safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans.
Public opinion has consistently supported the Patriot Act. An August 2003 Gallup Poll asked whether the Patriot Act goes too far, is about right, or doesn't go far enough in restricting people's civil liberties. Only 22 percent responded that it goes too far. Forty-eight percent said it is about right, and 21 percent answered that it does not go far enough.
In June 2003, the attorney general called for another law to further strengthen the powers of law enforcement to fight terrorists. Called "Patriot Act II" by critics, the proposed new law would, among other things, enable the government to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists.
The courts are just beginning to review the constitutionality of the Patriot Act. In the first major legal challenge to the Patriot Act, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit in July 2003 against Section 215 searches. The suit argues that these searches violate the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures as well as First Amendment freedoms of speech and association.
In a report called "Unpatriotic Acts," the ACLU warned that American freedom was endangered by the Patriot Act:

In a Washington Post opinion piece, Heather MacDonald, a writer at the Manhattan Institute, defended the Patriot Act. She countered the ACLU by stressing that Section 215 requires a court order. She said there was no reason for anyone to feel "afraid to read books" or "terrified into silence." "Were that ever the case, it would be thanks to the misinformation spread by advocates and politicians, not because of any real threat posed by" the Patriot Act.
It will be quite some time before cases like the ACLU lawsuit will reach the U.S. Supreme Court. The basic question that the court will have to answer is: What is the proper balance between national security and protecting individual rights?

For Discussion and Writing

  1. How does the Patriot Act define "domestic terrorism"? Do you think participants in public protests could ever be accused of "domestic terrorism" under this definition? Why or why not?
  2. The Justice Department has proposed that the government should be able to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists. Do you support the proposal? Why or why not?
  3. Below are two famous quotations. What do they mean? Which, if any, do you agree with? Explain.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.—Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)
There is danger that, if the [Supreme Court] does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.—Justice Robert H. Jackson dissenting in Terminiello v. City of Chicago (1949)

For Further Information

Patriot Act Background

Text of the Patriot Act
Library Records Post Patriot Act A chart showing the legal requirements for intercept orders, search warrants, pen/trap orders, and subpoenas. By Mary Minow, an attorney and former librarian.
A Guide to the Patriot Act By Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turner, Slate Magazine.
BeSpacific: Patriot Act Entries on the Patriot Act from a legal web log.
Wikipedia: USA PATRIOT Act
PBS

Critics of the Patriot Act

What's So Patriotic About Trampling on the Bill of Rights? By Nancy Chang, Center for Constitutional Rights.
ACLU: USA Patriot Act
American Library Association: USA PATRIOT Act
Electronic Frontier Foundation: USA Patriot Act
Electronic Privacy Information Center: The USA PATRIOT Act
USA Patriot Act & Intellectual Freedom A PowerPoint presentation by Carrie Lybecker, Liza Rognas, and Carlos Diaz of Evergreen State College.

Defenders of the Patriot Act

The Proven Tactics in the Fight against Crime A September 2003 speech by Attorney General John Ashcroft defending the Patriot Act from its critics.
Questions and Answers About the USA PATRIOT ACT From the U.S. Department of Justice.
Preserving Life and Liberty A Justice Department defense of the Patriot Act.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Orrin Hatch, U.S. senator from Utah.
A Letter To Congress: The Patriot Act Is Vital To Protecting National Security From Americans for Victory Over Terrorism.
MIMI NA WA NYUMBANI KWANGU WOTE TULIZITUPILIA MBALI LINES ZOTE ZA TIGO SIKU ILEILE TULIPOSIKIA TOKA KWA MWANASHERIA WA TIGO KWAMBA WAKIOMBWA TAARIFA ZA MTEJA HUWA HAWAJISUMBUI KUULIZA HIZO TAARIFA WANATAKA ZA NINI. HII NI HATARI KUBWA MNO! MAADAM KUNA MITANDAO MINGINE HAINA SHIDA TUENDE HUKO. HIVI MIMI NIKIMTUMIA MTU FEDHA KUPITIA TIGO AKANIGEUKA KWAMBA HII FEDHA ALIYONITUMIA ALIKUWA ANANIHONGA NIENDE KUKATA MITI YA BARABARA YA DAR- MOROGORO -IRINGA NITAFANYA NINI? SIITAKI TIGO NA SITAKI KABISA! INATUINGIZA KWENYE MATATIZO MAKUBWA BILA SABABU.
 
Na ww ni pimbi wa kiwango cha lami, yaani unaamini kabisa Mboe ni gaidi na mtoa shahidi tigo ni mkweli ??? Ivi huwaga akili zenu mnafkiria kutoka mtrakoni, em jiskieni aibu kama ni watu na akili zenu, mmezoea kuishi kiuwongo kwasababu tu ya siasa mnamvunjia mtu life yake kwa kumuweka ndani kwa ushahidi wa uongo, wallah iko day mtalipa heavy price kwa unyama mnaofanya
ETI KUKATA MITI YA BARABARA YA MOROGORO HADI IRINGA NA KUITANDAZA BARABARANI ILI MAGARI YASIPITE. KWELI!
 
Maslahi ya Taasisi kubwa kama hiyo kushiriki kutoa ushahidi wa uwongo!! achaneni ya siasa za Tanzania mtauza kampuni yenu hiyo.
 
Toka lini maslahi ya CCM yakawa maslahi ya Taifa?Acha uduanzi basi wewe kijana wa Lumumba:mad:
 
Dah, reference ni mabeberu🤔❗? Hivi watz na waafrika nani katuloga?

Siye siyo wa kwanza kubishana juu ya haki za mtu binafsi zinapoishia ili kupisha maslahi ya taifa. Suala hili limeibuka kwenye kesi ya Mbowe baada ya shahidi kutoka Tigo kutoa ushahidi kutokana na taarifa alizozitoa kwenye mfumo wao. Tigo wako sahihi kutumika maslahi ya Tiafa kuliyo ya Mbowe na wenzake.​


BRIA 19 4 a The Patriot Act: What Is the Proper Balance Between National Security and Individual Rig​


Soon after September 11, U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft brought before Congress a list of recommended changes in the law to combat terrorism. Some of these measures had long been opposed by members of Congress as infringing on the rights of Americans.
But September 11 had swept away all previous objections. The U.S. Senate quickly passed the USA PATRIOT ACT (Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism). Only one senator, Russell Feingold (D-Wis.), voted against it.
The next day, the House of Representatives passed the bill 357-66. The final bill was 342 pages long and changed more than 15 existing laws. Most of the Justice Department's recommendations were incorporated into it, but several provisions will expire in 2005.
On October 26, President George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act into law. He praised the "new tools to fight the present danger . . . a threat like no other our Nation has ever faced." He also asserted that the Patriot Act "upholds and respects the civil liberties guaranteed by our Constitution."
The Patriot Act defines "domestic terrorism" as activities within the United States that . . . involve acts dangerous to human life that. . . appear to be intended—

The Patriot Act and Privacy

Some of the most controversial parts of the Patriot Act surround issues of privacy and government surveillance. The Fourth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the "right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures . . . ." It requires law-enforcement officers to obtain warrants before making most searches. To get a warrant, officers must make sworn statements before a judge "particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized." The judge may only issue a search warrant if officers show "probable cause" that the person is engaged in criminal activity. Federal law requires that officers report to the court on the results of the search.
Surveillance such as wiretaps and physical searches requires officers to prove "probable cause" of criminality. Even before the Patriot Act, there were exceptions under federal law.
One was for so-called "pen-trap" orders. To obtain from a telephone company the numbers dialed to and from a particular telephone, officers must get a pen-trap order from a judge. They do not need to show probable cause, but must certify that the information is needed for an ongoing criminal investigation. The reason for the lesser standard is that these records are far less intrusive than wiretaps and physical searches.
Another major exception was for matters before the Federal Intelligence Surveillance Court. Congress created the court in 1978 following scandals revealing that U.S. intelligence agencies had spied on hundreds of thousands of American citizens, most notably the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.
The court was a compromise between those who wanted to leave U.S. intelligence agencies free from any restrictions and those who wanted intelligence agencies to apply for search warrants like other law-enforcement agencies. Congress required U.S. intelligence agencies (the FBI and National Security Agency) to apply for warrants for wiretaps and other surveillance on foreign governments and suspected foreign agents. But because the agencies are not investigating domestic crime, they do not have to meet the probable cause standard. They only have to certify that the purpose of the investigation is to track a foreign government or agent. They do not have to report to the court on the results of the surveillance. The court meets in secret with only government representatives present and has never denied an intelligence agency's application for a search warrant.
The Patriot Act expands all these exceptions to the probable-cause requirement. Section 215 of the act permits the FBI to go before the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court for an order to search for "any tangible things" connected to a terrorism suspect. The order would be granted as long as the FBI certifies that the search is "to protect against international terrorism or clandestine intelligence activities [spying]." But the FBI would not need to meet the stronger standard of probable cause.
The Patriot Act now authorizes this court to issue search orders directed at any U.S. citizen who the FBI believes may be involved in terrorist activities. Such activities may, in part, even involve First Amendment protected acts such as participating in non-violent public protests.
In Section 215, "any tangible things" may include almost any kind of property—such as books, documents, and computers. The FBI may also monitor or seize personal records held by public libraries, bookstores, medical offices, Internet providers, churches, political groups, universities, and other businesses and institutions.
The Patriot Act prohibits third parties served with Section 215 orders such as Internet providers and public librarians to inform anyone that the FBI has conducted a search of their records.
Section 216 of the Patriot Act extends pen-trap orders to include e-mail and web browsing. The FBI can ask Internet service providers to turn over a log of the web sites a person visits and the addresses of e-mail coming to and from the person's computer.
Another area of concern is Section 213 of the Patriot Act. It authorizes so-called "sneak-and-peek" searches for all federal criminal investigations. When applying for a search warrant, officers may show that there is "reasonable cause to believe that providing immediate notification . . . may have an adverse result." If the judge approves, then the FBI can delay notifying a citizen about the search for a "reasonable period." Thus, the FBI may search a citizen's home or business in secret. The FBI says these searches may be necessary to prevent the destruction of evidence or to keep from jeopardizing an ongoing secret investigation.

The Debate Over the Patriot Act

According to the Bill of Rights Defense Committee, four states (Alaska, Hawaii, Maine, and Vermont) and 364 cities, towns and counties have passed resolutions protesting provisions of the Patriot Act. In response to criticism of the act, Congress may be having some second thoughts. The House of Representatives voted 309-118 to repeal "sneak-and-peek" searches. In the Senate, Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska) and Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) have introduced the Rights of Individuals Act. This is a comprehensive bill, addressing a number of issues related to the Patriot Act. One part of the Murkowski-Wyden bill would limit "sneak and peek" searches. Those whose homes or offices had been searched under "sneak and peek" would have to be notified within seven calendar days.
Attorney General Ashcroft and other Americans defend the Patriot Act. "We are at war," Ashcroft says, "and we have to do things differently than we did before." He points out that the only purpose of the Patriot Act is "to prevent terrorists from unleashing more death and destruction." Ashcroft also argues that the courts and Congress still safeguard the constitutional rights of Americans.
Public opinion has consistently supported the Patriot Act. An August 2003 Gallup Poll asked whether the Patriot Act goes too far, is about right, or doesn't go far enough in restricting people's civil liberties. Only 22 percent responded that it goes too far. Forty-eight percent said it is about right, and 21 percent answered that it does not go far enough.
In June 2003, the attorney general called for another law to further strengthen the powers of law enforcement to fight terrorists. Called "Patriot Act II" by critics, the proposed new law would, among other things, enable the government to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists.
The courts are just beginning to review the constitutionality of the Patriot Act. In the first major legal challenge to the Patriot Act, the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) filed a lawsuit in July 2003 against Section 215 searches. The suit argues that these searches violate the Fourth Amendment's protection against unreasonable searches and seizures as well as First Amendment freedoms of speech and association.
In a report called "Unpatriotic Acts," the ACLU warned that American freedom was endangered by the Patriot Act:

In a Washington Post opinion piece, Heather MacDonald, a writer at the Manhattan Institute, defended the Patriot Act. She countered the ACLU by stressing that Section 215 requires a court order. She said there was no reason for anyone to feel "afraid to read books" or "terrified into silence." "Were that ever the case, it would be thanks to the misinformation spread by advocates and politicians, not because of any real threat posed by" the Patriot Act.
It will be quite some time before cases like the ACLU lawsuit will reach the U.S. Supreme Court. The basic question that the court will have to answer is: What is the proper balance between national security and protecting individual rights?

For Discussion and Writing

  1. How does the Patriot Act define "domestic terrorism"? Do you think participants in public protests could ever be accused of "domestic terrorism" under this definition? Why or why not?
  2. The Justice Department has proposed that the government should be able to ask a court to revoke the citizenship of any American who provides "material support" to terrorists. Do you support the proposal? Why or why not?
  3. Below are two famous quotations. What do they mean? Which, if any, do you agree with? Explain.
Those who would give up essential liberty to purchase a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.—Benjamin Franklin (1706 - 1790)
There is danger that, if the [Supreme Court] does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact.—Justice Robert H. Jackson dissenting in Terminiello v. City of Chicago (1949)

For Further Information

Patriot Act Background

Text of the Patriot Act
Library Records Post Patriot Act A chart showing the legal requirements for intercept orders, search warrants, pen/trap orders, and subpoenas. By Mary Minow, an attorney and former librarian.
A Guide to the Patriot Act By Dahlia Lithwick and Julia Turner, Slate Magazine.
BeSpacific: Patriot Act Entries on the Patriot Act from a legal web log.
Wikipedia: USA PATRIOT Act
PBS

Critics of the Patriot Act

What's So Patriotic About Trampling on the Bill of Rights? By Nancy Chang, Center for Constitutional Rights.
ACLU: USA Patriot Act
American Library Association: USA PATRIOT Act
Electronic Frontier Foundation: USA Patriot Act
Electronic Privacy Information Center: The USA PATRIOT Act
USA Patriot Act & Intellectual Freedom A PowerPoint presentation by Carrie Lybecker, Liza Rognas, and Carlos Diaz of Evergreen State College.

Defenders of the Patriot Act

The Proven Tactics in the Fight against Crime A September 2003 speech by Attorney General John Ashcroft defending the Patriot Act from its critics.
Questions and Answers About the USA PATRIOT ACT From the U.S. Department of Justice.
Preserving Life and Liberty A Justice Department defense of the Patriot Act.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Heather Mac Donald, a fellow at the Manhattan Institute.
In Defense of the Patriot Act By Orrin Hatch, U.S. senator from Utah.
A Letter To Congress: The Patriot Act Is Vital To Protecting National Security From Americans for Victory Over Terrorism.
 
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