Your Data Is for Sale, and the Feds Are Buying

The third-party doctrine is an outdated legal rule, created in an era before smartphones, before the internet, before our private lives became data. The fallout has been catastrophic. This decades-old principle erased the protections meant to shield us from arbitrary government intrusion and opened the door to a future of unchecked surveillance and control. In this video, we'll break down what the third-party doctrine actually is, how it works in a digital world, and why it has to go.

00:00 Yes, The Government CAN Do That
01:22 4th Amendment Review
02:50 3rd Party Doctrine Explained
10:22 The Reasonable Expectation of Privacy Test
14:09 How We Solve This
16:40 Bailment: The Most Important Term You've Never Heard Of
19:52 Congress Needs to Step In

The lie at the heart of the third-party doctrine is that it tells us that participating in modern life means surrendering the protections we were supposed to have against government searches. Let's remind people that in the constitution it says that searches require warrants.


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How Big Data Killed the Warrant