Deeplinks 09月29日
手机丢失不等于放弃数据隐私权
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第九巡回法院在“美国诉亨特案”中做出了一项有利于数字隐私的裁决,明确指出放弃手机并不等于放弃手机内数据的第四修正案隐私权。法院强调,搜查设备与搜查设备内数据应分开考量。即使警方合法持有硬件,也需要单独获得搜查令才能访问其中存储的个人信息。这一判决重申了在数字时代,宪法保护应伴随我们的数字生活,即使我们与设备分离。

📱 **手机分离不等于数据放弃**:第九巡回法院裁定,即使个人不再持有手机,也并不意味着放弃了手机内数据的第四修正案隐私权。这意味着,搜查手机硬件和搜查手机内存储的数据是两个独立的法律问题。

🗄️ **设备与数据区分考量**:法院明确指出,执法部门在搜查过程中必须分别评估当事人是否意图放弃物理手机以及是否意图放弃存储在其中的数据。鉴于智能手机包含大量个人信息,法院不太可能轻易认定用户放弃了数据隐私权。

⚖️ **搜查令在数字时代的重要性**:此判决强调,即使警方合法持有手机硬件,也无权随意访问其中的内容。在“亨特案”中,尽管最终获得了搜查令,但法院的区分原则为未来的数字隐私案件设定了重要先例,确保了在数字时代搜查令的必要性。

🌐 **数字隐私权的延伸**:该裁决支持了EFF等组织在“亨特案”中的论点,即个人可能与设备分离,但仍对其中信息保有强烈的隐私权益。这承认了智能手机作为个人生活全面记录的特殊性,并要求宪法保护应延伸至数字领域。

This posted was drafted by EFF legal intern Alexandra Halbeck

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, which covers California and most of the Western U.S., just delivered good news for digital privacy: abandoning a phone doesn’t abandon your Fourth Amendment rights in the phone’s contents. In United States v. Hunt, the court made clear that no longer having control of a device is not the same thing as surrendering the privacy of the information it contains. As a result, courts must separately analyze whether someone intended to abandon a physical phone and whether they intended to abandon the data stored within it. Given how much personal information our phones contain, it will be unlikely for courts to find that someone truly intended to give up their privacy rights in that data.

This approach mirrors what EFF urged in the amicus brief we filed in Hunt, joined by the ACLU, ACLU of Oregon, EPIC, and NACDL. We argued that a person may be separated from—or even discard—a device, yet still retain a robust privacy interest in the information it holds. Treating phones like wallets or backpacks ignores the reality of technology. Smartphones are comprehensive archives of our lives, containing years of messages, photos, location history, health data, browsing habits, and countless other intimate details. As the Supreme Court recognized in Riley v. California, our phones hold “the privacies of life,” and accessing those digital contents generally requires a warrant. This is an issue EFF has worked on across the country, and it is gratifying to see such an unambiguous ruling from an influential appellate court.

The facts of Hunt underscore why the court’s distinction between a device and its contents matters. In 2017, Dontae Hunt was shot multiple times and dropped an iPhone while fleeing for medical help. Police collected the phone from the crime scene and kept it as evidence. Nearly three years later—during an unrelated drug investigation—federal agents obtained a warrant and searched the phone’s contents. Hunt challenged both the warrantless seizure and the later search, arguing he never intended to abandon either the device or its data.

The court rejected the government’s sweeping abandonment theory and drew a crucial line for the digital age: even if police have legal possession of hardware, they do not have green light to rummage through its contents. The panel emphasized that courts must treat the device and the data as separate questions under a Fourth Amendment analysis.

In this specific case, because the government ultimately obtained a warrant before searching the device, that aspect of the case survived constitutional scrutiny—but crucially, only on that basis. The court also found that police acted reasonably in initially seizing the phone during the shooting investigation and keeping it as unclaimed property until a warrant could be obtained to search it.

Under Hunt, if officers find a phone that’s been misplaced, dropped during an emergency, or otherwise separated from its owner, they cannot leap from custody of the glass-and-metal shell to unfettered access to the comprehensive digital record inside. This decision ensures that constitutional protections don’t evaporate just because someone abandons their device, and that warrants still matter in the digital age. Our constitutional rights should follow our digital lives—no matter where our devices may end up.

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数字隐私 第四修正案 手机数据 搜查令 第九巡回法院 Digital Privacy Fourth Amendment Phone Data Warrant Ninth Circuit
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