Richmond Journal of Law and Technology

The first exclusively online law review.

Legalizing Fentanyl Test Strips

By: Nate Gilmore

 

Fentanyl overdoses are now the leading cause of death for adults between the ages of 18-45.[1] It was tied to nearly 64 percent of all drug fatalities in 2021, nearly doubling from 2020.[2] During this time, fentanyl overdoses have killed more people than car accidents, gun violence, breast cancer, and suicide.[3] It is not a political debate; it is an infestation. U.S. Customs and Border Protection confiscated over 11000 pounds of fentanyl coming over America’s southern border in 2021, almost three times greater than the year prior.[4] Immediate action must be taken to reduce the risk of these overdoses.

Fentanyl is a synthetic opioid commonly added to other drugs such as cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine.[5] Deadly fentanyl levels mixed into these drugs cannot be detected by sight, taste, or touch.[6] Fentanyl test strips are inexpensive and are seen as one of the only ways to effectively determine if fentanyl is present.[7] With such a cheap and effective way to help lower the death tows rising, why are these strips not offered in stores across the country? The main problem is that these testing strips are only legal in a few states.[8] In states such as Florida, however, they are considered “drug paraphernalia,” where possession is a first-degree misdemeanor.[9] The potential life-saving strip could land you up to a year in prison.[10]

Things are looking up, however, in the sunshine state. This month, Florida State Representative Andrew Learned and State Senator Sevrin Jones have filed identical bills in the Florida House and Senate that would decriminalize fentanyl test strips.[11] Drug paraphernalia is currently defined as “all equipment, products, and materials of any kind which are used, intended for use, or designed for use in planting, propagating, cultivating, growing, harvesting, manufacturing, compounding, converting, producing, processing, preparing, testing, analyzing, packaging, repackaging, storing, containing, concealing, transporting, injecting, ingesting, inhaling, or otherwise introducing into the human body a controlled substance. . . .”[12] “Testing” is to be removed from the definition, and the bills would also decriminalize drug testing equipment such as fentanyl test strips.[13] Passage of these bills would be a massive step forward in increasing the availability of fentanyl test strips across the state and hopefully help stall overdose rates. Opponents of fentanyl test strips say that this approach encourages illegal drug use, as it is not requiring that someone stops taking drugs.[14] While this is a valid claim, the staggering fentanyl overdose rates over the last few years show that immediate action should be taken in an attempt to lower these rates, and the research on fentanyl test strips shows how efficient it can be.[15]

Fentanyl has crossed over our borders and poisoned this great country from within. With overdose rates increasing every year, U.S. citizens should be outraged and demand immediate legislative action. Legalizing fentanyl test strips would help identify fentanyl in a substance and will help reduce the risk of overdose, saving the lives of struggling addicted citizens.[16]

 

[1] Dan Grossman, Fentanyl is the Leading Cause of Death in Americans Ages 18-45, The Denver Channel (Jan. 04, 2020, 7:28 PM), https://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/national/fentanyl-is-the-leading-cause-of-death-in-americans-ages-18-45.

[2] Deidre McPhillips, Drug Overdose Deaths Top 100,000 Annually for the First Time, Driven by Fentanyl, CDC Data Show, CNN Health (Nov. 17, 2021, 12:27 PM), https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/17/health/drug-overdose-deaths-record-high/index.html.

[3] Adam Shaw & Andrew Mark Miller, Fentanyl Overdoses Become No. 1 Cause of Deaths Among US Adults, Ages 18-45: ‘A National Emergency’, Fox 10 Phoenix (Dec. 16, 2021), https://www.fox10phoenix.com/news/fentanyl-overdoses-become-no-1-cause-of-death-among-us-adults-ages-18-45-a-national-emergency.

[4] See id.

[5] The Facts About Fentanyl, CDC (Nov. 2, 2021), https://www.cdc.gov/stopoverdose/fentanyl/index.html.

[6] Id.

[7] Id.

[8] Fentanyl Test Strips: Why Are They Illegal, Addiction Resource (Jan. 13, 2022), https://www.addictionresource.net/blog/fentanyl-test-strips/ (stating that in Alaska, Colorado, Maryland, Nebraska, New York, South Carolina, Virginia, Washington D.C., and Wyoming, fentanyl test strips are legal or decriminalized).

[9] Fla. Stat. § 893.147.

[10] Fla. Stat. § 775.082.

[11] McKenna Schueler, Florida Lawmakers File Legislation to Decriminalize Fentanyl Test Strips, WMNF (Jan. 7, 2022), https://www.wmnf.org/florida-lawmakers-file-legislation-decriminalize-fentanyl-test-strips/.

[12] Fla. Stat. § 893.145.

[13] Schueler, supra note 11.

[14] Fentanyl Test Strips: Why Are They Illegal, supra note 8.

[15] Fentanyl Test Strips: Why Are They Illegal, supra note 8.

[16] Fentanyl Test Strips: Why Are They Illegal, supra note 8.

 

Image Source: https://www.brown.edu/news/2019-01-18/fentanyl

The Legal Industry’s Low-Code Solution

By Charlie McCarthy

 

No-code legal software stands uniquely positioned to provide the legal industry with cost-effective and highly versatile solutions for delivering legal services in the new workforce environment.  The legal industry faces retention challenges and a call to modernize from both employees and clients.[1] The 2022 CLIO report found that firms were more likely to invest future spending in software solutions than any other investment.[2] Firm leadership held this viewpoint because they viewed software as strategic investments that create lower-cost tools to boost revenue to allow long-term and higher-cost staff investments.[3] No-code legal software stands apart to adapt to the legal industry’s dynamic fiscal and operational needs.[4]

No-code application platforms provide lawyers with building elements to create their own applications tailored to their specific automation and digital workflow needs.[5] Low-code software, a predecessor to no-code, is “visual-focused software… targeted towards developers… for those skilled in programming to program faster.”[6] Low-code is often discussed alongside no-code as an answer for simplifying software delivery for legal services.[7] However, low code is solely focused on the software developer, which requires the legal provider to outsource costly IT integration and adhere to rigid perimeters once the software is implemented.[8] Conversely, no-code software is centered on lawyers as builders and eliminates the need for the lawyers to have any programming knowledge to build their applications.[9] Operationally, no-code features “visual building such as drag and drop tools, (allowing) lawyers to manipulate pre-built blocks of code to handcraft technological solutions while the platform auto-generates the code in the background.”[10] Typical no-code applications involve automating intake procedures, auditing compliance, automating document and contract creation review and management, providing automatic business flow updates, tracking financial metrics, and automated performance review processes.[11] Additionally, no-code eliminates the expensive, complex, and time-intensive process of having software developers build specific code for particular business needs.[12] A significant benefit to no-code software is that it allows lawyers to prototype their applications, update as needed, and scale to meet their clients’ needs.[13]

BRYTER, a leading no-code service automation platform, provides “the backend capability of a powerful corporate solution with a more user-friendly, intuitive design, so all users have access… allow(ing) users in the organization to start creating digital tools themselves and have them published and enterprise-ready”.[14] Their approach lets lawyers build their own digital applications in only a matter of weeks to manage their specific business needs while providing the capacity to build software on top as complexity requires.[15] Legal OS, another no-code platform, creates digital knowledge graphs “to be used to build legal service products, generate documents, embed compliance, or automate processes through the open-source Legal OS automation platform.”[16] No-code companies appeal to enterprises to allow their employees to become “citizen coders” and build their apps to increase workplace efficiency.[17]

The pandemic has broadened the acceptance of the role of technology in the effective delivery of legal services.[18] Despite expense cuts, law firms increased their technology spending by 7.1% during the 12-month period through November 2021.[19] As the delivery of legal services evolves with client and employee demands, no-code software stands apart as readily available technology to provide adaptable and cost-effective solutions in the delivery of legal services.

 

[1] Thomas Reuters Institute, 2022 Report on State of the Legal Market 1, 23-24 (2021).

[2] CLIO, LEGAL TRENDS REPORT, 44 (2021).

[3] Id.

[4] Olga Mack, Preparing for the No-Code and Low-Code Age of Law, Bloomberg Law (May 24, 2021), https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/preparing-for-the-no-code-and-low-code-age-of-law.

[5] Id.

[6] What is no-code, BRYTER, https://bryter.com/trends/what-is-no-code/.

[7] Id.

[8] Id.

[9] Mack, supra note 4.

[10] Id.

[11] Id.

[12] Steven Lerner, Push For Attys To Code Loses Steam In No-Code World, Law 360 pulse (Aug 13, 2021), https://www.law360.com/pulse/articles/1412598/push-for-attys-to-code-loses-steam-in-no-code-world.

[13] BRYTER, No-code for Law Firms 28 (2021).

[14] Id. at 14.

[15] Id.

[16] Legal OS (2021), https://www.legalos.io/.

[17] No-code for law firms, supra note 13, at 14.

[18] See generally Legal Trends Report, supra note 2.

[19] State of the Legal Market supra note 1, at 23.

Image Source: https://zvolv.com/blog/blog/2020/02/03/the-rise-of-no-code-development-platforms/

Deepfakes and the Copyright Connection: Analysing the Adequacy of the Present Machinery

Deepfakes and the Copyright Connection: Analysing the Adequacy of the Present Machinery

By Akhil Satheesh

Introduction:

As the United States, for the second consecutive year accounts for deepfakes in the National Defense Authorization Act, (NDAA), and calls for the Department of Homeland Security to prepare annual reports[1] on this technology for the next 5 years, the issued presented by it can no longer be swept under the rug.

Deepfakes consists of a pair of competing algorithms[2], a generator that renders artificial content and a discriminator that identifies which aspects are original or fake. This generative adversarial network (GAN) is self-learning, and each time the discriminator algorithm observes content to be fake, this information is supplied to the generator, resulting in the creation of more convincing images/videos with each new iteration.

Deepfakes possesses immense potential for malicious use, with over 90%[3] of deep fake content being false pornographic videos of individuals without their consent and false political propaganda.[4]

Regulating Video Doorbell Surveillance—Your Neighbors are Recording

By Chris Jones*

 

I. Introduction

As technology continues to evolve, private companies are weaponizing consumers with surveillance tools ultimately utilized for purposes far beyond the average user’s expectation. Ring doorbells are effectively turning neighborhoods into “surveillance hotbeds” while allowing the government to track neighbors’ movements on the curtilage of their own property.[1] Amazon provides police access to Ring’s footage without obtaining a warrant. This footage can be used to continuously track ones movement in both private and public spaces by connecting footage from multiple Ring doorbells. As a result, individuals are subjected to unwanted surveillance from neighbors acting as conduits for law enforcement, without probable cause or judicial oversight.

This article argues the utilization of Ring doorbells—as a neighborhood surveillance tool—have become a considerable threat to ones privacy in their own home. In October, 2021, an Oxford County Court determined that a neighbor’s Ring video and audio recording doorbell violated the UK General Data Protection Regulation (“GDPR”). Thus, in order to integrate the benefits of technology with the sanctity Americans expect in their own homes, Congress should require informed consent for recording from all entities that own property within the range of a surveillance doorbell.

II. Overview of Ring Doorbell Surveillance

In 2018, Amazon acquired Ring and partnered with local law enforcement agencies in the U.S. to expand neighborhood surveillance.[2] Amazon’s partnerships provide police departments with access to an online portal where officers can view footage from local Ring users without obtaining a warrant.[3] Cities promote Ring doorbells to local residents and purchase subsidized Ring devices with taxpayer funding.[4] In turn, these partnerships benefit Amazon by expanding Ring’s nationwide surveillance network and promoting its devices.[5]

Ring doorbells are essentially surveillance cameras that replace a traditional doorbell.[6] A video doorbell detects motion ranging from people approaching the door, to cars driving by, to neighbors entering their homes on property within the camera’s range.[7] The software is synchronized with an online application that allows the owner to “see, hear, and speak to visitors in real time from anywhere.”[8] Ring doorbells have the capacity to record audio from as far as 40 feet away.[9] While Ring includes a Privacy Zone option to block the taping of a neighbor’s property, it requires the user take affirmative action to utilize this setting.[10]

Ring uses the data to access, use, preserve, or disclose content to law enforcement, government, or third parties for various purposes.[11] By utilizing footage from Ring, law enforcement can essentially track an individual’s movements through private and public spaces by linking together one camera after another. Deleted content and user recordings may still be retained by Ring in order to comply with certain legal obligations.[12] Therefore, once footage is recorded, the user does not control their personal content.[13]

Additionally, Amazon has been found to utilize footage of consumer doorbell cameras for its own advertising purposes, further violating the privacy of unsuspecting neighbors.[14] Recent reports believe that Ring is implementing facial recognition into its surveillance devices, adding an entirely new spectrum of surveillance.[15] Thus, Ring doorbells endanger the privacy of all individuals, even those who do not have an Amazon account.[16]

III. Legal Background

An individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy is often measured by the standard established in Katz v. United States.[17] In Katz, the court moved away from constitutionally protecting ones privacy in physical spaces to protecting the privacy of an individual themselves.[18] The court implemented the Reasonable Expectation of Privacy Test where an individual’s expectation is measured by whether it is one that society is prepared to recognize as reasonable.[19]

In United States v. Antoine Jones, the court determined that law enforcement should not have immediate access to every move a person makes over an extended period of time without consent or a warrant.[20] The court held that the warrantless placement of a GPS tracking device on a person’s vehicle—in order to track all of the movements of a person on public streets—was considered an unlawful search, violating the “effects” portion of the Fourth Amendment.[21]

In Jones, Justice Sotomayor’s dissent contemplated the mosaic theory of privacy where individuals have a reasonable expectation that their movements will not be recorded and aggregated “in the sum” to infer one’s personal beliefs, habits, and potentially sensitive information.[22] While substantial privacy indicators, Katz and Jones only apply to the government leaving individuals vulnerable to exploitation from private entities.[23]

Minimal federal statutes currently exist to regulate the use of private surveillance cameras. The Wiretap Act allows for silent video recording through a network; however, places restrictions on the recording of aural communications.[24] Some states allow audio recording for conversations in which one participating party has provided consent.[25]

In October, 2021, Oxford County Court Judge Melissa Clarke determined a neighbor’s Ring video and audio recording doorbell violated the UK Data Protection Act 2018 and the GDPR.[26] According to Clarke, “the video images and audio files that the Ring doorbell and cameras captured of the neighbor” were property belonging to the neighbor.[27] While the United States relies on a patchwork of federal and state statutes, private tort claims, sectoral laws, and FTC rules to enforce privacy regulation, it lacks a comprehensive federal privacy law, comparable to the GDPR.[28]

IV. Ring Doorbell Owners Lack Consent to Publicize Neighbor’s Footage

In the United States, there is a gap in legal protection for recording ones movements on the curtilage of their own home, something the public considers private. For example, Google recognized this need for privacy and instituted a policy to blur the data that appears in Google Street View photos.[29] This data includes license plate numbers, people’s faces, and other indentifying marks of a person or place—especially those with sensitive ramifications.[30]

“Persistent and targeted surveillance collapses individual moments of interaction, spread out over time and mitigated through human forgetfulness, into one long story of an individual’s life.”[31] This type of surveillance can lead to inferences about highly sensitive areas of a person’s life, such as addictions, health, religion, or sexual activities.[32] When one is under surveillance for a long period of time—as a Ring camera does—the nature of the harm changes with the scope of the protectable right of privacy.[33] For example “one photograph of a person in public may offend his dignity. Twenty-eight days of targeted tracking meaningfully disrupts his environment and his behavior.”[34]

Ring intrudes on ones right to privacy while on the curtilage of their home.[35] As the Court determined, “the curtilage of the home is considered as ‘part of the home itself for Fourth Amendment’ purposes and, thus, afforded the same protections.”[36] The curtilage “consists of the area immediately surrounding a home where the private details of the home naturally extend, and it is ‘intimately linked to the home, both physically and psychologically.’”[37] Thus, the reasonable expectation of privacy afforded to individuals in their home should be extended to the curtilage and should apply to private parties—like Ring.

Moreover, concerns exist over what technology companies actually do with the footage once they collect it, potentially aggregate it, and retain it.[38] Mission creep occurs when parties gather data for one reason; however, end up using it in bad faith or find other uses for it, even when not explicitly authorized.[39] Here, Ring is owned by Amazon—one of the world’s largest retailers—known for its excessive marketing efforts.[40] If Amazon and Ring were to exchange data revealing a consumer’s every movement near their own home, it would likely benefit Amazon’s marketing division,

In response to the Oxford County Court’s ruling, Amazon issued a statement encouraging users to respect their neighbor’s privacy and comply with applicable laws.[41] Ring’s violation of wiretapping laws is discussed in a forum on Amazon’s website. Here, various individuals focus on obtaining consent from those standing on the user’s front porch—not from neighbors who happen to live nearby.[42]

Critics argue that The Wiretap Act allows general surveillance footage to be obtained without informed consent from those in the video, provided there is no aural component. However, Ring’s video doorbells have the ability to record audio from 40 feet away. Thus, a property owner’s conversation in their own yard could very well be captured by a neighbor’s doorbell. While some states allow recording aural conversations with consent from one party, the consenting party must participate in the conversation. Therefore, the recording of neighbor’s aural conversations—in which the recording party is not participating—likely violates The Wiretap Act.

Other critics argue the owners are lawfully on their own property and possess rights to the footage recorded. Thus, the owners can provide informed consent to viewing and sharing of the recordings to others. This position may lead to high privacy walls constructed around individual properties. Even then, Ring would still track the comings and goings of cars entering the property.

As the Supreme Court has exemplified the principles recognizing an individual’s right to privacy in their own autonomy,[43] the same concept should apply to private entities. If state actors are prohibited from tracking ones every movement, private parties should be prohibited as well. Therefore, Ring’s recording of residents on the curtilage of their private homes should be viewed as unauthorized access and property of the subject being recorded. Ring is a private party and the footage subjects have not consented to the recording or publishing of their movements or conversations.

V. Solution

While many bills have been proposed, there are still no comprehensive privacy laws at the federal level, let alone any statutes to specifically regulate neighborhood doorbell surveillance.[44] The Supreme Court has implied that Congress is the “best-situated body to protect privacy interests in the face of burgeoning technological advances.”[45] In Jones, the Supreme Court has “shown a willingness to uphold legislation providing for appropriate uses of and safeguards against the sort of technology whose abuse may result in substantial encroachments by the government into private life.”[46]

Absent a comprehensive federal privacy law, this article proposes Congress should enact legislation to require informed consent for recording from all entities that own property within the range of a surveillance doorbell’s camera. This statute should include a private right of action that allows ordinary citizens to bring suit against neighbors who record surveillance footage of their property without consent. The private right of action is necessary for increased compliance as a doorbell owner would be far more likely to honor a neighbor’s refusal to consent if they knew that individual could bring a private lawsuit against them. Without a private right of action, it would be incredibly costly and onerous for a regulatory agency—such as the FTC—to enforce. This right would minimize the role and expenses required for enforcement of this law and increase the likelihood that neighbors would police themselves.

Compliance with this statue would be simple as Ring doorbells have the ability for a property owner to block out areas of footage through Privacy Zone settings. This would only necessitate companies, like Ring, to provide doorbell owners with a standard consent form that complies with the statute. Prior to activating the Ring device, users would be required to sign a contract stating they would obtain a signed consent form from any property owners within the camera’s range. Therefore, the responsibility for compliance would fall entirely on the owner, relieving Ring of any burdensome enforcement.

Thus, while an individual’s movements in public spaces may be subject to taping and publicity, ones movements and conversations while on the curtilage of their own home should be sacred. An individual’s personal space requires special consideration to end this substantial encroachment into ones private life.

VI. Conclusion

Congress is well positioned to deal with the new surveillance issues resulting from Ring doorbells and similar technological devices. Action must be taken at the federal level in order to curtail this significant invasion of privacy occurring from neighbors’ recording. By providing sweeping protection for all U.S. residents from unwanted doorbell surveillance, Congress can help to balance the benefits of technology with the sanctity we have all come to expect in the privacy of our own homes.

 

* J.D., Gonzaga University School of Law. Acknowledgments and gratitude to Noelle Green and Professor Drew Simshaw for their invaluable insights and continuing support.

[1] See Dan Milmo, Amazon asks Ring Owners to Respect Privacy after Court Rules Usage Broke Law, Guardian, (Oct. 14, 2021),  https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2021/oct/14/amazon-asks-ring-owners-to-respect-privacy-after-court-rules-usage-broke-law  (Hannah Hart, a digital privacy expert at ProPrivacy, explains that Ring’s doorbells enable “a small number of residents [to] effectively transform public spaces into surveillance hotbeds, and even share their recordings with police”).

[2] Grace Egger, Ring, Amazon Calling: The State Action Doctrine & the Fourth Amendment, 95 Wash. L. Rev. Online 245, 245-46 (2020).

[3] Id. at 253.

[4] Id. at 251.

[5] Id. at 254.

[6] See Ring Video Doorbells, Ring, https://ring.com/doorbell-cameras/ (last visited May 6, 2021).

[7] See generally id.

[8] Ring Terms of Service, Ring, https://ring.com/terms (last updated Dec. 8, 2020).

[9] See Ring, supra note 6.

[10] Understanding Privacy Zones, Ring, https://support.ring.com/hc/en-us/articles/360027979331-Understanding-Privacy-Zones (last visited May 3, 2021).

[11] Ring, supra note 8.

[12] Ring, supra note 8.

[13] See Ring, supra note 8.

[14] See Ariana Aboulafia, Greg Fritzius, Tessa Mears, & Macy Nix. The Price of Prime: Consumer Privacy in the Age of Amazon. 42 Mitchell Hamline L. J. Pub. Pol’y & Prac. 138, 149 (2021).

[15] Hannah Bloch Wehba, Visible Policing: Technology, Transparency, & Democratic Control, SSRN 1, 39  (Mar. 10, 2020), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3552240.

[16] See Aboulafia, Fritzius, Mears, & Nix, supra note 14, at 140.

[17] See Katz. V. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 358 (1967).

[18] See id.

[19] Id.

[20] See United States v. Jones, 132 U.S. 945, 955-57 (2012).

[21] Id. at 946-47.

[22] See Orin S. Kerr, The Mosaic Theory of the Fourth Amendment, 111 Mich. L. Rev. 311, 328 (2012).

[23] See Wayne Unger, Katz and COVID-19: How a Pandemic Changed the Reasonable Expectation of Privacy, SSRN 1, 24 (Sept. 14, 2020), https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3692652.

[24] The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, Title 1. 18 U/S.C. §§2511.

[25] See id.

[26] See Milmo, supra note 1.

[27] See Milmo, supra note 1.

[28] See Chris Jones, The iOS 14.5 Update: A Game Changer for Federal Privacy Law, 28 Rich. J. L. & Tech., no.1, (2021).

[29] Patrick Gallo & Houssain Kettani, On Privacy Issues with Google Street View, 65 S.D. L. Rev. 608, 610  (2020).

[30] Id.

[31] Margot E. Kaminsky, Privacy and the Right to Record, 97 Boston U. L. Rev. 167, 215 (2015).

[32] Id.

[33] See id. at 217.

[34] Id.

[35] See generally Matthew R. Koerner, Drones and the Fourth Amendment: Redefining Expectations of Privacy, 64 Duke L. J. 1129, 1139-40 (2015).

[36] Id. at 1139.

[37] Id.

[38] Richard M. Thompson II, Domestic Drones and Privacy: A Primer, Cong. Research Serv. 1, 8-9 (Mar. 30, 2015), https://fas.org/sgp/crs/misc/R43965.pdf.

[39] Benjamin White, Clipped Wings: Domestic Drone Surveillance and the Limits of Due Process Protection, 86 U. Cin. L. Rev. 357, 360 (2018).

[40] Lauren Debter, The World’s Largest Retailers 2020, Forbes (May 13, 2020), https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurendebter/2020/05/13/the-worlds-largest-retailers-2020-walmart-amazon-increase-lead-ahead-of-the-pack/?sh=56601dd18d35.

[41] See Milmo, supra note 1

[42] See Can you disable audio recording to avoid violating wiretapping law requiring 2 party consent in states like ma, ca, pa, il, wa, ct, etc?, Amazon  (Jan. 21, 2018),  https://www.amazon.com/ask/questions/Tx1OXUJ8ZWUHROA/?.

[43] See Katz, 389 U.S. at 358; See Jones 132 U.S. at 955-57.

[44] White, supra note 39, at 373.

[45] White, supra note 39, at 373.

[46] White, supra note 39, at 389.

Source image: https://www.howtogeek.com/thumbcache/2/200/17aed3e8a5b5d78d4cc204c52c0e704e/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/digital-surveillance-eye.jpg

 

Marijuana Breathalyzers?

By Alyssa Thompson

 

In the last several years, states have changed their laws regarding marijuana use rapidly.[1] As evidenced by the graphic above, marijuana use is only fully illegal in four states (South Carolina, Kansas, Wyoming, and Idaho).[2] With legalization and decriminalization of marijuana the legal status in the majority of states, DUIs stemming from cannabis consumption have become a topic of discussion.

Alcohol has been a known culprit for impaired driving for decades.[3] However, researchers have recently found that marijuana has also become a major culprit for impaired driving.[4] From 2000 to 2018, the percentage of crash deaths involving marijuana have increased from 9% to 21.5%.[5] A 2017 Colorado survey found that 70% of cannabis consumers drove under the influence of marijuana at least once within the last year, while 27% of consumers reported to drive high almost daily.[6] Perhaps one of the reasons marijuana related fatal car crashes are on the rise is because most marijuana tests can “…not distinguish between past use and acute intoxication,”[7] making it difficult for law enforcement to crack down on high driving.

In Virginia, the police may arrest someone for a DUI if they suspect the person is driving under the influence of marijuana.[8] Since Virginia does not have an acute intoxication detection technology, blood tests are needed to detect THC.[9] However, these blood tests cannot pinpoint when the driver last smoked or ingested marijuana as THC can remain detectable for up to several weeks after ingestion. In order to convict a driver for driving under the influence of marijuana, the courts will need to rely on an officer’s perception of an individual in conjunction with the blood test[10], which may prove problematic. Juries may not be willing to convict for a marijuana related DUI if it cannot be proven that the driver had ingested marijuana just prior to arrest.

Some companies have attempted to create acute intoxication technologies, or in other words, a marijuana breathalyzer.[11] A California based company, Hound Labs Inc., and a Canadian Company, Cannabix Technologies Inc., have reported to have invented functional marijuana breathalyzers.[12] These breathalyzers allegedly can detect THC on an individual’s breath.[13] Hound Labs Inc.’s technology can only pick up THC during the “peak window of impairment” or approximately 1 to 2 hours after ingestion.[14]

So, if the technology is out there why isn’t law enforcement using it? Perhaps one of the largest hurdles this technology has yet to clear is passing a legal standard.[15] In Virginia, the legal driving limit for alcohol is 0.08%. State governments would have to conduct research to find the safe legal limit for marijuana if they do not wish to implement zero tolerance laws. This would likely prove costly. The marijuana breathalyzers may be quite costly themselves, with one California police department reporting they would have to pay $1,000 per breathalyzer.[16] It is also possible that the Covid-19 Pandemic has left state and local governments with fewer resources, making obtaining marijuana breathalyzers a lower priority. As of present, it is unclear whether marijuana breathalyzers will be utilized by law enforcement any time soon.

 

[1] Map of Marijuana Legality By State, DISA, https://disa.com/map-of-marijuana-legality-by-state (last updated Jan. 2022).

[2] Id.

[3] Jessica Colarossi & Jazmin Holdway, Deadly Car Accidents Involving Cannabis and Alcohol Have Doubled in 20 Years, Boston Univ. (Dec. 16, 2021), https://www.bu.edu/articles/2021/deadly-car-accidents-involving-cannabis-and-alcohol-have-doubled/.

[4] See id.

[5] Id.

[6] Lilly Price, Marijuana Breathalyzer Aims to Detect High Drivers ‘without unjustly accussing’, Usa Today (Aug. 7, 2018), https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2018/08/07/pot-breathalyzers-hound-labs-marijuana/912705002/.

[7] Colarossi, supra note 3.

[8] Understanding Virginia Marijuana DUI Charges – How Do They Prove It?, Randall, Page, & Bruch, PC (July 29, 2020), https://www.randallpagelaw.com/news/article/understanding-virginia-marijuana-dui-charges-how-do-they-prove-it.

[9] Id.

[10] See id.

[11] Price, supra note 6.

[12] See id.

[13] See id.

[14] Id.

[15] See, e.g., Despite New Technology, Some Police Officers Do Not Use Marijuana Breathalyzers, Your Central Valley (Oct. 16, 2019), https://www.yourcentralvalley.com/news/local-news/despite-new-technology-some-police-officers-do-not-use-marijuana-breathalyzers-2/.

[16] See id.

Image Source: https://disa.com/map-of-marijuana-legality-by-state

U.S. Government’s Future in Antipiracy

By: Drew Apperson

 

The U.S. Copyright Office recently provided notice that it is considering a significant antipiracy step—the development of “technical measures” (i.e., content-recognition software) that will identify or protect copyrighted works online.[1] These measures have traditionally been implemented via private collaborations among willing stakeholders, such as online service providers and rightsholders. The Office’s plan, however, is to address major issues with the existing measures, primarily inclusivity—which stakeholders must collaborate on the front-end development.[2] The Office explained that existing measures’ “strictly voluntary nature presents inherent limitations. The absence of comprehensive coverage and the exclusion of certain stakeholder interests during the development stages could hinder a measure’s sustainable success.” [3]

One of the Office’s examples of existing measures is YouTube’s Content ID,[4] which blocks millions of allegedly infringing videos each year.[5] Content ID is a “matching system that automatically identifies content that may be infringing . . . . [by scanning it] against a database of files submitted by copyright owners.”[6] The measure automatically blocks matched content from being shared on the site, notifies the uploader of their alleged infringement, and provides several options to the rightsholder: (1) block the content outright, (2) permit the content and track its viewer statistics, or (3) permit the content and receive royalties from advertisements displayed to the content’s viewers.[7] The exact amount of content that Content ID requires for a match is unknown, but possibly a single image or just a few seconds of audio may suffice.[8]

Although Content ID’s match precision and threshold may be beneficial for existing rightsholders in recognizing potentially infringing works, Content ID is known to be so effective that some argue the measure deters, if not prevents, fair use by potential rightsholders, or content creators.[9] One of the Office’s considerations is how this affects small, lesser-represented content creators.[10] The Office addressed the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Lenz v. Universal Music Corp,[11] where a homemade video of a small child dancing was automatically flagged because its background music matched a song in Content ID’s database.[12] The Office suggested that Content ID’s precision and threshold, as well as its lack of human input, resulted from insufficient stakeholder collaboration during front-end development.[13]

The Office noted that a “key feature of any future voluntary measure should . . . involve cooperation among rightsholder organizations, all sizes of [online service providers], individual creators, and users.”[14] The Copyright Office is therefore hosting consultations consisting of one plenary session in February, followed by a series of “smaller, industry-sector specific sessions” throughout the Spring.[15] The Office has provided questions for public comment, such as whether there is even a role for the government to play, and if so, how to accomplish it. Several questions are explicitly intended for specific stakeholders: rightsholders, online service providers, or users of those online services.[16] The questions are fairly broad and encourage widespread participation, and for good reason – there are a lot of stakeholders. YouTube alone provides localized versions of its site to over 100 countries[17] and accounts for an estimated 2.2 billion users worldwide, including approximately 204 million in the U.S.[18] Accordingly, “the Office also emphasized the importance of flexibility, accountability, and comprehensive reporting.”[19]

By Summer 2022, the Copyright Office should have a clearer prediction of whether it can address the extensive concerns and develop a successful, comprehensive measure.

 

[1] Technical Measures: Public Consultations, 86 Fed. Reg. 72,638 (Dec. 22, 2021).

[2] Id. at 72,639.

[3] Id.

[4] Id.

[5]  See Number of Videos Removed from YouTube Worldwide from 4th Quarter 2017 to 3rd Quarter 2021, Statista (Dec. 7, 2021), https://www.statista.com/statistics/1132890/number-removed-youtube-videos-worldwide.

[6] Overview of Copyright Management Tools: Content ID, YouTube: Help Center (last visited Dec. 30, 2021), https://support.google.com/youtube/answer/9245819?hl=en&ref_topic=9282364#zippy=%2Ccontent-id.

[7] Id.

[8] Katherine Trendacosta, Unfiltered: How YouTube’s Content ID Discourages Fair Use and Dictates What We See Online, Electronic Frontier Foundation (Dec. 10, 2020), https://www.eff.org/wp/unfiltered-how-youtubes-content-id-discourages-fair-use-and-dictates-what-we-see-online.

[9] Id.

[10] U.S. Copyright Office, Section 512 of Title 17, 150–52 (2020), https://www.copyright.gov/policy/section512/section-512-full-report.pdf.

[11] Id.

[12] See Lenz v. Universal Music Corp., 801 F.3d 1126, 1154 (9th Cir. 2015).

[13] U.S. Copyright Office, Section 512 of Title 17 27–47 (2020), https://www.copyright.gov/policy/section512/section-512-full-report.pdf.

[14] Technical Measures: Public Consultations, 86 Fed. Reg. 72,638, 72,639.

[15] Id.

[16] Id. at 72,640.

[17] YouTube for Press, YouTube (last visited Dec. 30, 2021), https://blog.youtube/press.

[18] Number of YouTube Viewers Worldwide, Statista (Aug. 31, 2021), https://www.statista.com/statistics/805656/number-youtube-viewers-worldwide; Online Video Entertainment, Statista (last visited Dec. 30, 2021), https://www.statista.com/markets/424/topic/542/online-video-entertainment/#overview; YouTube Users in the United States, Statista (July 20, 2021), https://www.statista.com/forecasts/1147203/youtube-users-in-the-united-states.

[19] Technical Measures: Public Consultations, 86 Fed. Reg. 72,638, 72,639.

Spotify Patented Emotional Recognition Technology to Recommend Songs Based on User’s Emotions

By Najah Walker

 

Spotify is a Swedish-based music service that provides music fans across the world with the ability to legally stream millions of songs.[1] Spotify has garnered massive success since its launch in 2008 and has grown to be one of the biggest streaming platforms in the world.[2] The innovative service was ahead of its time in the early 2000’s by compensating music artists based on the streams they received.[3]

Thirteen years later, Spotify continues to be a leader in innovation.[4] Spotify has patented a technology that can analyze human voice and surrounding noises to make song suggestions based on “emotional state, gender, age, or accent” and several other characterizations.[5] According to the patent, Spotify’s new technology would be able to access a user’s social settings and determine if they were at a party, a small group, or if they were alone.[6] Spotify intends for this technology to better assist users by providing more accurate music recommendations.[7]

They have been adamant about the need to protect their user’s privacy, disavowing “any future research or applications that violate ethical standards of data usage”.[8] However, several users and artists are concerned that Spotify’s new technology will come at the expense of user privacy.[9] Several activists groups, users and musicians have called the technology invasive and have suggested the software is discriminatory.[10] One musician candidly said, “Claiming to be able to infer someone’s taste in music based on their accent or detect their gender based on the sound of their voice is racist, transphobic, and just plain creepy”.[11] There is also a concern that the use of artificial intelligence to recommend music in this way will further divide, be inaccurate and exclude people who don’t speak the languages the system might have been hardcoded to prioritize over others.[12]

Although Spotify may have pure intentions to offer their users the best musical experience, they may do more damage than good by implementing this technology.[13] While it may not be fully accepted yet, similar technology has already been patented by Apple, Google and Amazon in the last few years.[14] The reality of the situation is in the next few years speech emotional recognition technology may be widely used and effect more than just Spotify users.[15]

 

[1] See How Spotify Came to Be Worth Billions, BBC News (Mar. 1, 2018), https://www.bbc.com/news/newsbeat-43240886.

[2] Id.

[3] Id.

[4] See generally Mark Savage, Spotify Wants to Suggest Songs Based on Your Emotions, BBC News (Jan. 28, 2021), https://www.bbc.com/news/entertainment-arts-55839655.

[5] Id.

[6] Id.

[7] Id.

[8] Id.

[9] See Umberto Bacchi, Spotify Urged to Rule Out “Invasive’ Voice Recognition Tech, Reuters (May 4, 2021), https://www.reuters.com/article/us-tech-music-privacy/spotify-urged-to-rule-out-invasive-voice-recognition-tech-idUSKBN2CL1K9.

[10] Id.

[11] Id.

[12] Id.

[13] Id.

[14] See Josh Mandell, Spotify Patents A Voice Assistant That Can Read Your Emotions, Forbes (Mar. 12, 2020), https://www.forbes.com/sites/joshmandell/2020/03/12/spotify-patents-a-voice-assistant–that-can-read-your-emotions/?sh=51556b3438d5.

[15] Id.

Image Source: https://in.pinterest.com/pin/540361655297878027/

Blockchain as Best Practice: The Benefits of the Criminal Justice System Implementing Blockchain Technology

By Merritt Francis

 

Blockchain technology was created in 2008 by an anonymous group or person, the creator(s) of Bitcoin, “Satoshi Nakamoto.”[1]  Blockchain is a set of technologies that creates an encrypted, distributed/ decentralized ledger.  A “decentralized” ledger means there is no central authority.  Rather, the information is shared and distributed to thousands of computers (“nodes”) on a peer-to-peer network, which are located around the world.[2]

The decentralized ledger could, for example, maintain an accurate system of payments and receipts for the cryptocurrency associated with the blockchain.   Central authorities, such as a bank maintaining a ledger of all its users’ transactions, are lucrative targets for cybercriminals.[3]  Because a blockchain does not exist in one place, it offers two distinct advantages over centralized authorities: broader access, and greater security.[4]

Blockchains are comprised of “blocks,” which are digitally recorded data that are linked together in chronological order into one “chain.”  Once the “block” of data is chained to the other existing data on the blockchain, the data cannot be altered without altering all the subsequent blocks of data, which would require collusion from a majority of the network’s computers located around the world.[5]  Put differently—it is nearly impossible to alter data once it is encrypted onto a blockchain.  As a result, blockchain technology can be utilized as a tamper-evident and tamper-resistant way to structure, store, and secure data.

The implementation of blockchain technology into our everyday lives is inevitable. And, there are infinite benefits the legal field will realize once the private and public sectors utilize blockchain technology.  As discussed below, our criminal justice system would greatly benefit from utilizing blockchain technology.

The most identifiable benefit of blockchain technology is its real-time, immutable record-keeping ability.  Foreign judicial systems have already implemented blockchain technology as a tool for surveilling parolees.[6]  In Foshan, China, law enforcement officials created a community correction program to track the location of convicted offenders in real-time.[7]  Parolees are required to wear electronic bracelets fitted with a tracking encryption program at all times.[8]  Because the system uses blockchain technology to track the results, the data gathered is completely resistant to tampering and corruption.[9]

The United States’ judicial systems, on the other hand, use manual check-ins and over-burdened case workers to keep track of its paroled criminals.  Implementing blockchain technology will simplify the entire parole process, while also making it a more trust-worthy system in the process.

The immutable, real-time record-keeping will also be key in issuing warrants and maintaining criminal histories.[10]  Courts issue search and arrest warrants to multiple different agencies, such as law-enforcement agencies, prosecutors, and probation and parole officers.  Once a warrant is issued, numerous criminal-justice partners need “read” and “write” access to the warrant.[11]  Law-enforcement officers are often required to contact the issuing court to validate the warrant, while other law-enforcement officers “pack” a warrant with additional information about the defendant.[12]  The number of participants and handoffs involved in issuing and executing warrants makes it an excellent area to employ blockchain technology.

The same goes for maintaining an accurate record of an individual’s criminal history.  Prosecutors, courts, and criminal-history repositories are all responsible with updating criminal charges.  Approximately 20,000 people in the United States are falsely accused, convicted, and incarcerated each year.[13]  Today, many criminal-justice partners use manual data entry, ongoing audits, and quality-control efforts to maintain their respective databases.  But, with blockchain technology, the courts, prosecutors, and law-enforcement officers could all make changes to the initial Blockchain arrest record, flowing throughout the adjudication process, tying charges to ultimate dispositions.  Every time an amendment is made, the blockchain records the party who made the amendment.  And, individuals can only make amendments when they have been delegated such authority.

Blockchain technology will also significantly benefit chain of custody in criminal cases.  Current evidence management systems are susceptible to theft, tampering and, at its worst, manipulation of evidence within the evidence management system.[14]  But, there would be drastic improvements to a chain of custody’s integrity if evidence was recorded on blockchain technology.   When submitting evidence into police custody, officers would be required to report the state of the evidence as it was being submitted.  Then, any person removing the evidence would have to confirm the evidence was in the same state as the blockchain reflects.  Further, any person receiving the evidence in a chain of custody would immediately be able to compare the “state” of the evidence as it was recorded in the system with the “state” last recorded on the blockchain.  If the evidence appears to have been tampered with, the receiver can refuse to accept the evidence and report the problem immediately, instead of receiving it while lacking knowledge as to the evidence’s condition when it was first taken into custody.  In a court-setting, an individual accused of a crime would be able to compare evidence collected at the scene to the evidence’s recorded “state” on the blockchain.[15]

Implementing blockchain technology in criminal law would significantly increase the efficiency and integrity of our current criminal law system.  Moreover, the technology is readily available, as developers are creating privatized blockchains for companies and agencies looking to benefit from the increased efficiency and integrity.

 

[1] Grace Kay, The many alleged identities of Bitcoin’s mysterious creator, Satoshi Nakamoto, Business Insider (Nov. 28, 2021), https://www.businessinsider.com/bitcoin-history-cryptocurrency-satoshi-nakamoto-2017-12#:~:text=The%20many%20alleged%20identities%20of%20Bitcoin’s%20mysterious%20creator%2C%20Satoshi%20Nakamoto&text=The%20identity%20of%20Bitcoin’s%20creator,become%20a%20top%20digital%20currency.

[2] Di Graski & Pail Embley, When Might Blockchain Appear in Your Court?, Nat. Cen. for St. C. (Nov. 14, 2019), https://www.ncsc.org/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/14913/blockchaininthecourts.pdf.

[3] Id.

[4] Id.

[5] John Salmon & Gordon Myers, Blockchain and Associated Legal Issues for Emerging Markets, Note 63, Int’l. Fin. Corp. (Jan. 2019), https://www.ncsc.org/__data/assets/pdf_file/0018/14913/blockchaininthecourts.pdf.

[6]  Sophia Scott, Blockchain Behind Bars: The Case for Cryptocurrency in Criminal Justice, Harv. Tech. Rev. (Aug. 28, 2021), https://harvardtechnologyreview.com/2021/08/28/blockchain-behind-bars-the-case-for-cryptocurrency-in-criminal-justice-2/.

[7] Id.

[8] Id.

[9] Id.

[10] Graski, supra note 2.

[11] Id.

[12] Id.

[13]  Derick Anderes et al, The Use of Blockchain within Evidence Management System, https://f.hubspotusercontent10.net/hubfs/5260862/Ebooks%20and%20Whitepapers/Blockchain%20of%20Evidence%20FINAL%20DRAFT-3.pdf.

[14] Id.

[15] Id.

Image Source: https://www.smh.com.au/business/for-security-agencies-blockchain-goes-from-suspect-to-potential-solution-20171203-gzxq2j.html

Anyone Have a Link?

By Nick Corn IV

In America, sports are a big business. A June 2021 poll done by Statista found that 72% of American adults polled self-categorized themselves as either a casual or avid fan of at least one sports team.[1] Numbers like these are no surprise to the networks that broadcast sports. On November 18th, 2021, NBCUniversal purchased the broadcasting rights to Premier League matches for the next 6 years for a whopping $2.7 billion.[2] The networks that make such lucrative deals obviously hope to make their money back in ad revenue and subscription service fees. However, with the cheapest cable or subscription service on the market carrying NBC Sports being SlingTV’s Blue package, costing $35 a month, many sports fans on a budget may turn to more illicit options.[3]

So where do you find them? Those seedy links with pop-up ads that you certainly wouldn’t want other people to see. Well, they are surprisingly easy to find for many Americans with just a few clicks. Piracy data company MUSO found that in January of 2019 alone there were 362.7 million visits to sports piracy websites.[4] A March 2020 survey conducted across 10 countries found that 51% of people who identified as sports fans admitted to using pirated streams monthly.[5] More shockingly, of that group that consumed pirated streams monthly, 89% owned a subscription or cable tv package.[6] While some of the consumers of pirated sports streams are the result of local blackouts or unavailability to find a game with the packages the consumer already owns, a large target of the sites that host pirated content are pay-per-view (PPV) events. When Deontay Wilder and Tyson Fury fought on PPV for the World Boxing Council Heavyweight title in 2018, 300-325,000 people paid Showtime $74.99 to watch the fight.[7] Meanwhile, nearly 10 million people watched the fight on 133 pirated streaming domains.[8] Also in 2018, Oklahoma and Army played their opening football game of the season, exclusively available on FOX PPV for $54.99.[9] By the time the game went into overtime, there were over 32,000 people who were watching a stream of the game filmed off someone’s phone that was hosted on the site Twitch.[10]

So, what is being done about this? Well, in the past a popular source of streaming links were different communities, known as subreddits (or simply “subs”), on the popular social media site Reddit. Beginning in April 2018, those in leadership positions at the company started to issue warnings on infringements of copyrighted material to admins of subreddits which were home to pirated material.[11] This includes subs such as r/CFBStreams, r/NBAStreams, and r/SoccerStreams.[12] In the case of r/SoccerStreams, the subreddit was permanently banned for piracy while other subs have removed all linked content to avoid a similar ban, instead choosing to direct people to another third-party site which would host the links (such as SportSurge.net.) In some cases, the parties whose copyrighted content is being pirated have taken to directly suing those who host streams of such content. In 2021, DISH Network and SlingTV filed suit in Texas against pirated streaming giant SportsBay for the hosting of pirated streams on their site, seeking upwards of $2,500 in damages per viewer.[13]

And what about you? While I am sure that such a fine reader such as yourself would not partake in illegally shared content, what would be your liability if you did? Well, in the most lawyerly tone possible, it depends. In most circumstances, many of the owners of copyrighted material are more concerned going after the people sharing the content, rather than the end-consumers. Most of this is because the governing statute, the Copyright Act of 1976, only criminalizes the copying, distribution, and performance of copyrighted material.[14] While a potential end-user, such as yourself, would not have to worry about the distribution prong, it is likely you wouldn’t have to worry about the copying or performance prong of the statute as well as pseudo-streaming (where a buffer is created to prevent lagging) has copies that almost instantaneously disappear after consumption and you likely aren’t streaming the content for anything more than your own private consumption (as opposed to turning your living room into a theatre which you charge admission to.)[15] While there has been a single case of the UFC suing a consumer of pirated versions of their copyrighted content, it was under a different statute—47 U.S.C. 553 – Unauthorized reception of cable service—and the verdict was the result of a default judgment rather than the result of a full trial.[16] As Jim Gibson, a law professor at the University of Richmond School of Law, said in an interview: “[W]hether it’s illegal from a copyright viewpoint, the best answer is, probably not on an individual viewer basis.”[17]

 

[1] See Christina Grough, Share of sports fans in the United States as of June 2021, Statista (June 24, 2021), https://www.statista.com/statistics/300148/interest-nfl-football-age-canada/.

[2] See Rob Goldberg, Premier League, NBC Sports Extend TV Rights Contract in Deal Reportedly Worth $2.7B, Bleacher Report (Nov. 18, 2021), https://bleacherreport.com/articles/10018558-premier-league-nbc-sports-extend-tv-rights-contract-in-deal-reportedly-worth-27b.

[3] See Best live TV streaming service for cord-cutters, CNET (Nov. 22, 2021), https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/best-live-tv-streaming-service-for-cord-cutters/.

[4] See Henry Bushnell, Inside the Complex World of Illegal Sports Streaming, Yahoo Sports (Mar. 27, 2019), https://sports.yahoo.com/inside-the-complex-world-of-illegal-sports-streaming-040816430.html.

[5] See Sam Carp, Study: 51% of Sports Fans Watch Pirate Streams Despite 89% Owning Subscriptions, SportsPro Media (June 4, 2020), https://www.sportspromedia.com/news/live-sport-piracy-service-pay-tv-ott-platform-subscription-study/.

[6] See id.

[7] See Josh Katzowitz, Here’s The Huge Number of People Who Watched Deontay Wilder vs. Tyson Fury on Illegal Streams, Forbes (Dec. 7, 2018), https://www.forbes.com/sites/joshkatzowitz/2018/12/07/deontay-wilder-tyson-fury-ppv-buys-illegal-streams/?sh=3d09adc512ca.

[8] See id.

[9] See Matt Clapp, Oklahoma-Army OT Game Only Available on $55 PPV, 32K Fans Turn to Some Guy’s Cell Phone Stream Instead, Awful Announcing (Sept. 23, 2018), https://awfulannouncing.com/fox/oklahoma-army-ot-game-only-available-on-55-ppv-32k-fans-turn-to-some-guys-cell-phone-stream-instead.html.

[10] See id.

[11] See Joseph Knoop, Reddit is Cracking Down on Pirates Sharing Illegal Copies of Movies, Daily Dot (Sept. 23, 2018), https://www.dailydot.com/debug/reddit-piracy-crackdown/.

[12] See Luke Bouma, Reddit is Cracking Down on Piracy SubReddits Like NBAStreams, Cord Cutters News (June 18, 2019), https://www.cordcuttersnews.com/reddit-is-cracking-down-on-piracy-subreddits-like-nbastreams/.

[13] See Andy Maxwell, DISH & Sling Sue Pirate Sites For Circumventing Sports Stream DRM, TorrentFreak (July 31, 2021), https://torrentfreak.com/dish-sling-sue-pirate-sites-for-circumventing-sports-stream-drm-210731/.

[14] See Joe Supan, When is Streaming Illegal? Here’s What You Need to Know About Pirated Content, Allconnect (May 18, 2021), https://www.allconnect.com/blog/is-streaming-illegal.

[15] See id.

[16] See Iain Kidd, UFC has Successfully Sued at Least One Person for Watching Streams, SB Nation (Feb. 11, 2014), https://www.bloodyelbow.com/2014/2/11/5402548/ufc-won-steaming-lawsuit-individual.

[17] See Supan, supra note 14.

Image Source: https://www.ibtimes.com/forget-pirate-bay-use-these-illegal-sports-streaming-sites-watch-any-game-free-2093399

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