Amazon gives up fight for alexa’s first amendment rights after murder defendant hands over data
Amazon gives up fight for alexa’s first amendment rights after murder defendant hands over data"
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:
has abandoned its legal battle to protect its Alexa assistant with First Amendment rights — for now at least. The company filed a motion against a police search warrant in an Arkansas murder
case earlier this month, but has now dropped the case after the defendant agreed to hand over the data contained on his Echo speaker to police. Luke MacGregor | Bloomberg | Getty Images In
documents filed last Monday, defendant James Andrew Bates said that he was willing to allow law enforcement officials to review information contained on his Amazon Echo speaker, before the
company handed the data over on Friday. Bates has pleaded not guilty to the murder of Victor Collins, who was found dead in Bates' hot tub in November 2015 Police had issued a warrant
to seize subscriber and account information from Bates' Echo, as well as all communication and transaction history from the device. Amazon provided the former, but argued against
providing communication data, claiming that voice interactions with Alexa were protected by the First Amendment. MORE FROM THE VERGE The Hawaiian volcano that created a spectacular fire hose
of lava just collapsed Apple, Facebook, Google, and 94 others file opposition to Trump's immigration ban Google's Super Bowl ad accidentally set off a lot of Google Homes That
includes Alexa's replies to a user — Amazon claims that ranked search results are "constitutionally protected opinion." Precedent for that argument was set by a 2014 case in
which Google search results were classified as "free speech" by a San Francisco court, after a news website complained that its own pages were too far down the company's
listings. Amazon argued that police didn't have enough of a compelling argument in Bates' case for it to hand over the data, with officials unable to prove that any potential
information would not be available anywhere else. It remains to be seen whether Bates' Echo does indeed have any pertinent information — a hearing is scheduled for Wednesday this week.
The defendant's acquiescence also means that we don't yet have a definitive answer on whether Alexa is indeed protected by the First Amendment.
Trending News
Watch out, Iran! Why Britain’s laser-wielding Tempest fighter will TERRIFY enemiesThe Tempest will be deployed by the mid-2030s as a replacement for the Typhoon, once known as the Eurofighter. The proje...
Youth vote with easeWednesday saw a good response from first-time voters, most of whom were surprised at the ease of the whole process and t...
Soaring prices bring down flat saleThe increase has been 42% in past 6 months; recent sales way below peak recorded last year but city developers in no moo...
Board immune in superintendent's firing, court rulesMembers of a Georgia school board that fired the district’s superintendent were immune from her lawsuit alleging that th...
VAT is fat, thanks to buildersThey decide to charge 2.5%-4.5% from those who bought under-construction flats during 2006-10Irrfan Khan listened to thi...
Latests News
Amazon gives up fight for alexa’s first amendment rights after murder defendant hands over datahas abandoned its legal battle to protect its Alexa assistant with First Amendment rights — for now at least. The compan...
13 indians among 15 dead in nepal plane crashEleven Indian pilgrims were among 15 people killed when a private plane crashed in northern Nepal on Tuesday after hitti...
Bloc party get nostalgic on pulsating new single 'sex magik'The track is the third single from the band's upcoming album _Alpha Games_ Bloc Party have shared another song from...
Fern britton speaks out on family life with phil vickeryFern Britton, a twice-married mother of four, said she does not believe there is such as thing as a “perfect family”. Ho...
14 people killed in an ied blast outside madarsa in quetta in pakistanAt least 14 people were killed and more than 40 wounded in a powerful IED bomb blast outside a seminary in Quetta, polic...