The Supreme Court just made it official

The Supreme Court is restricting the use of “geofence warrants.”

President Donald Trump's administration defended the investigative method in the case

The Supreme Court's decision to limit geofence warrants is a win for privacy advocates, who called their use unconstitutional but sought an outright ban.

The case involving a Virginia bank robbery is the latest example of the justices wrestling with how to apply constitutional protections to new technology.

Kagan said location data resembles other private materials such as emails, photographs or documents.

The Supreme Court ruled that geofence warrants are Fourth Amendment searches and revived a Virginia man’s challenge to cellphone location evidence.

The Supreme Court has held that constitutional privacy protections extend to cellphone location information, ruling in the case of a bank robber whose identity was discovered…

The court stopped short of declaring geofence warrants unconstitutional.

The Supreme Court rendered a decision this morning on a case debating whether or not people have an “expectation of...

The high court on Monday ruled that the use of a “geofence warrant” to capture location data from cell phones in search of a robbery suspect constituted a search for Fourth…

Efforts to grab all the location data in an area get clogged by Fourth Amendment

SCOTUS falls short of deeming geofence warrants unconstitutional, though.

The divided Supreme Court ruled that Americans are entitled to privacy protections even if they consent to tech companies tracking their location.

The US Supreme Court on Monday ruled partially in favor of a man challenging the use of sweeping "geofence" searches of cellphone location data in his robbery conviction, sending…

The Supreme Court on Monday ruled that police looking to obtain sweeping data on cellphone users near a crime scene must have a warrant.

The Supreme Court ruled that police conduct a Fourth Amendment search when they obtain a person’s detailed cellphone location history from a tech company.

Supreme Court rules constitutional privacy protections apply to geofence warrants - SiliconANGLE

The Supreme Court ruled geofence warrants need probable cause, finding people have a reasonable expectation of privacy in their phone location data.

The Supreme Court has ruled that constitutional privacy protections extend to cellphone location information.

The Supreme Court just made it official