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londons_exploretoday at 6:09 PM2 repliesview on HN

> The case involved several people suspected of fraud related to the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance program

If it were preventing a mass murder I might feel differently...

But this is protecting the money supply (and indirectly the governments control).

Not a reason to violate privacy IMO, especially when at the time this was done these people were only suspected of fraud, not convicted.


Replies

Aurornistoday at 6:15 PM

> Not a reason to violate privacy IMO, especially when at the time this was done these people were only suspected of fraud, not convicted.

Well you can't really wait until the conviction to collect evidence in a criminal trial.

There are several stages that law enforcement must go through to get a warrant like this. The police didn't literally phone up Microsoft and ask for the keys to someone's laptop on a hunch. They had to have already confiscated the laptop, which means they had to have collected enough early evidence to prove suspicion and get a judge to sign off and so on.

SoftTalkertoday at 6:14 PM

They had a warrant. That's enough. Nobody at Microsoft is going to be willing to go to jail for contempt to protect fraudsters grifting off of the public taxpayer. Would you?