You can Sex Trek The Man Eater (1999) porn parodycall it Goliath vs. Goliath.
Microsoft is set to face a battle with U.S. authorities who want access to data stored outside of the country. The Supreme Court will hear arguments on Tuesday on whether the Department of Justice can force U.S. companies to hand over foreign-stored data.
SEE ALSO: Facebook data is powering Stanford economist's American inequality studyThe result will have implications for tech companies that already store data around the world, as privacy advocates and governments once again face-off for the rights of internet users and law enforcement.
The case began in 2013, when the U.S. government issued a warrant ordering Microsoft to hand over the contents of an email account. Authorities suspected it was being used to facilitate drug trafficking, the data of which was stored on a Microsoft server in Dublin, Ireland.
Microsoft refused to hand over the data, arguing that U.S. law (in this case, the Stored Communications Act) doesn't stretch outside of its borders.
The U.S. government argued that it should be allowed access the data, as Microsoft has control of the data within the U.S., and that the tech giant is an American company.
"It’s more likely to be a recipe for international tension and chaos."
But for Microsoft, allowing the U.S. government to exercise its authority outside of national borders "would instigate a global free-for-all," giving other governments the impetus to respond in kind by seizing data from U.S. computers.
"It’s more likely to be a recipe for international tension and chaos," Microsoft’s president and chief legal officer Brad Smith told reporters, according to Reuters.
In the eyes of U.S. authorities, a win for Microsoft in this case would hamper the ability to act on crimes which cross borders, such as drug trafficking and child pornography. It's worth noting Ireland and the U.S. already have a treaty to exchange emails and other data needed to aid an criminal investigation, but of course, it takes longer for authorities to get it.
The dispute has led to the introduction of a new bill called the Clarifying Lawful Overseas Use of Data (CLOUD) Act to Congress last Wednesday, which hopes to establish guidelines and standards when it comes to accessing data across borders.
Apple, Facebook, Google and Microsoft have expressed support for the Act. In a statement, the alliance said it would be "an important step toward enhancing and protecting individual privacy rights, reducing international conflicts of law and keeping us all safer."
Topics Cybersecurity Microsoft Privacy Supreme Court
Wordle today: Here's the answer and hints for May 31Dead Authors at Fashion Week: Part 4 by Katherine BernardPoetic Prescriptions, Banished Words by Sadie SteinWhat We’re Doing Tonight: TPR at Greenlight Books! by Sadie SteinA Week in Beirut by Nathan DeuelOf Bloggers and Book Clubs by Sadie SteinWordle today: Here's the answer and hints for May 31Doyle’s Journals, Rowling’s House by Sadie SteinWomen are thanking Chrissy Teigen for sharing her heartbreaking pregnancy journeyBut What Is He Reading? by Sadie SteinCossacks and Clowns and Bears, Oh My! by Sophie PinkhamAndroid users could finally be able to screen share on WhatsAppHobbit Mythology, Classics Reinvented by Sadie SteinMeeting Joan Didion by Lucy McKeon'Barry' Season 4 ending explained: One lastMark Hamill drops the mic on the Biden'Cops' films new episodes, but they won't air in the U.S.A Week in Beirut by Nathan DeuelThe Strongman Con: How to stop worrying about Trump stealing the electionPopular anti What We’re Doing: Necessary Errors at McNally Jackson by Sadie Stein Jumping for Joyce, and Other News by Sadie Stein Hypothetical Tom Robbins–Inspired Ben & Jerry’s Flavors by Sadie Stein A Table of Remarkable Æras and Events by Sadie Stein Confessions of an Accidental Book What We’re Loving: Psycho Happy Birthday, Raymond Chandler by Sadie Stein Andri Snær Magnason, Reykjavik, Iceland by Matteo Pericoli True Romance by Sadie Stein Beer Paradise A Partial List of Things John Berryman Found Delicious by Elon Green Heartless Thief Steals Books on Bikes Bicycle, and Other News by Sadie Stein Always Remember by Sadie Stein Week in Culture: Sophie Pinkham, Slavicist by Sophie Pinkham Museum Hours by Drew Bratcher Sketches from the Trial of Bradley Manning by Molly Crabapple What We’re Doing: Not Staying in Room 1212 The California Room by Jessie Kissinger Hell Is Other Gamers by Sadie Stein To Be or Not To Be? And Other News by Sadie Stein
2.3879s , 8223.9921875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Sex Trek The Man Eater (1999) porn parody】,Charm Information Network