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Ok, so this one is a lot creepier than it sounds. The Police department asked google for details on anyone that searched for the home's address in the last month or two. Not for ultra specific things like you would expect. Hell, FedEX could have ended up on the list because of this.

The good side? A bunch of nogs that murdered (the wrong) nogs are going to jail (the morons intended to set someone else's house on fire). The bad side? Well, this is a massive overreach and should scare the hell out of you if you use google, don't have a VPN, etc...

Archive: https://archive.today/BSRLP

From the post: "DENVER — In a 5 -2 decision, the Colorado Supreme Court on Monday ruled the controversial reverse Google keyword search warrant utilized by the Denver Police Department to track down suspects involved in ahouse fire that killed a Senegalese family of five in Denver's Green Valley Ranch neighborhood in 2020 could be admitted as evidence and remanded “the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”

It’s a decision that could have broad implications in how investigators use digital technology to help crack cases beyond this case.

The fire in the 5300 block of N. Truckee Street on August 5, 2020, which investigators suspected started as a result of arson, killed a toddler, child, and three adults. The family had immigrated to Colorado from Senegal."

Ok, so this one is a lot creepier than it sounds. The Police department asked google for details on *anyone* that searched for the home's address in the last month or two. Not for ultra specific things like you would expect. Hell, FedEX could have ended up on the list because of this. The good side? A bunch of nogs that murdered (the wrong) nogs are going to jail (the morons intended to set someone else's house on fire). The bad side? Well, this is a massive overreach and should scare the hell out of you if you use google, don't have a VPN, etc... Archive: https://archive.today/BSRLP From the post: "DENVER — In a 5 -2 decision, the Colorado Supreme Court on Monday ruled the controversial reverse Google keyword search warrant utilized by the Denver Police Department to track down suspects involved in ahouse fire that killed a Senegalese family of five in Denver's Green Valley Ranch neighborhood in 2020 could be admitted as evidence and remanded “the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.” It’s a decision that could have broad implications in how investigators use digital technology to help crack cases beyond this case. The fire in the 5300 block of N. Truckee Street on August 5, 2020, which investigators suspected started as a result of arson, killed a toddler, child, and three adults. The family had immigrated to Colorado from Senegal."

(post is archived)