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Panelists debate privacy law in Internet age

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Legal Times

November 26, 2012

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Kannon Shanmugam was messing around with his Google account the other day when he learned about a function that shows users where and when their e-mail was accessed in recent weeks.

"I've been to a lot of interesting places," Shanmugam, a Williams & Connolly partner, recalled. He added, confidently: "There was not some Chinese hacker accessing my account."

Shanmugam, who practices in U.S. Supreme Court and appellate litigation, spoke about this discovery at a recent panel discussion looking at how Congress, the courts and law enforcement agencies are grappling with the divide between keeping people safe and protecting individual privacy.

The panelists, who included Janet Fisher, general counsel of the House Intelligence Committee, and Clifford Fishman, a professor at the Catholic University of America Columbus School of Law, rooted the discussion around the Supreme Court's decision in U.S. v. Jones, the GPS tracking device case, and its implications for privacy law.

Shanmugam said "the amount of information that is out there is astonishing." There's a heightened sensitivity now, more than ever, to the amount of information that people are exposing in day-to-day life, Shanmugam said at the panel talk, held by Catholic University. (Click here for a link to a video of the talk.)

"I actually think that the current scandal involving General (David) Petraeus, to me, kind of drives home this home—every day when you read about the information that the FBI obtained and how they were able to link up…a Gmail account to particular computers," Shanmugam said at the November 15 panel. (Shanmugam's colleague, Robert Barnett, now represents Petraeus.)

The panelists, who also included former Maryland state appellate judge Joseph Murphy Jr. and Anne McKenna, a Baltimore-based partner at Silverman Thompson Slutkin & White, delved into a range of topics—from the government's interest in facial recognition to issues about whether the younger generation has shown it's less interested in the protection of privacy.

"It will be interesting to see to what extent the sort of generational issue colors the way Congress and courts go about analyzing this," Shanmugam said.

Fisher, the House intelligence general counsel, spoke at length about the challenges facing members of Congress as they try to craft legislation addressing law enforcement surveillance tools and for the protection of privacy.

"You are trying to legislate for all time not knowing what's coming down the pipeline. Bad guys are going to use the new technology," said Fisher, who formerly worked at Williams & Connolly and at the U.S. Justice Department. "We don’t want a world where all bets are off and everybody can be tracked wherever they are. There's no easy solution."

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Firms mentioned

    
  • Williams & Connolly

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • The Catholic University of America Columbus, Ohio School
  • House Intelligence Committee
  • FBI
  • Metro inc.
  • Google Inc.
  • Supreme Court
  • U.S. Justice Department

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