m00c0w
It doesn’t matter; it’s over.
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2012
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In my opinion, the problem with this argument is twofold:I think there would be a legitimate issue if e.g. law enforcement uses those databases in a way that violates the opt in/out of the person who submitted their DNA originally. We're already seeing some states legislate to regulate the way it's done, which is a good thing as investigations stemming from IGG that is properly overseen and reviewed won't run into issues like this.
1 - the TOS is not a legally binding document. Police can violate terms of service on social media, for instance, to surveil suspects. That particular type of behavior has been upheld plenty of times, even when the covert account was used to befriend a suspect with a private account.
One such example: Police Can Create Fake Instagram Accounts To Investigate Suspects | TechCrunch
It is a hard argument to make that "well, I'm okay with the general public having access to this information, but not police specifically." And even if someone did opt out and that information was used:
2 - the suspect identified based on this information doesn't have standing to complain in the first place. It was not their uploaded material that police accessed "improperly". A similar argument would be if a person takes a photo and uploads it to their private social media account that just happens to catch a great view of a suspect that allows investigators to identify the suspect. The suspect can't complain that someone else did a thing and that maybe the police injured this third party somehow.
If police were breaking into homes to scoop up DNA of everyone in Moscow to compare them against the reference DNA, that would be problematic. This isn't that. People voluntarily uploaded their DNA to a publicly accessible database that was then used to find a killer. And at the end of the day, that information wasn't even used as the basis for any probable cause statement that we know of. Police got a lead, went back and reviewed their case, used their own evidence previously collected, and made a solid case that this dude was the killer. IGG isn't being used to convict him. It wasn't even used to do something as basic as get historical cell site data - there was already enough probable cause present based on the actual evidence police collected.
All my opinion.