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TERMS OF SERVICE AND FOURTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS.

Authors :
Kerr, Orin S.
Source :
University of Pennsylvania Law Review. January, 2024, Vol. 172 Issue 2, p287, 42 p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

INTRODUCTION 288 I. TERMS OF SERVICE AND DIVIDED COURTS 291 A. Introduction to Terms of Service 292 B. Cases Holding That Terms of Service Determine Fourth Amendment Rights 294 C. [...]<br />Almost everything you do on the Internet is governed by Terms of Service. The language in Terms of Service typically gives Internet providers broad rights to address potential account misuse. But do these Terms alter Fourth Amendment rights, either diminishing or even eliminating constitutional rights in Internet accounts? In the last five years, many courts have ruled that they do. These courts treat Terms of Service like a rights contract: by agreeing to use an Internet account subject to broad Terms of Service, you give up your Fourth Amendment rights. This Article argues that the courts are wrong. Terms of Service have little or no effect on Fourth Amendment rights. Fourth Amendment rights are rights against the government, not private parties. Terms of Service can define relationships between private parties, but private contracts cannot define Fourth Amendment rights. This is true across the range of Fourth Amendment doctrines, including the "reasonable expectation of privacy" test, consent, abandonment, third-party consent, and the private search doctrine. Courts that have linked Terms of Service and Fourth Amendment rights are mistaken, and their reasoning should be rejected.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00419907
Volume :
172
Issue :
2
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
University of Pennsylvania Law Review
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.785026983