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essentially, when it comes to technology and cybersecurity nonexistent. and, therefore, you know, you see these things happen when government just becomes too big and immobile. and, you know, to the hacker s credit, all he did was call verizon and say, hey, i work for verizon too, i need this guy s information, and the perp on the other end the person on the other wednesday said, here you go. it was a fairly unsophisticated breach. harris: he and a group did this. they posed, they tricked, and they got what they needed. so is there a political party out there, andrea, that maybe is in favor of smaller government? [laughter] and where are they? andrea: the republicans nowadays are acting so much like the democrats, i get confused so much. i feel like the 28-year-old stoner. speaking of the stoner, get that guy a dime bag, some rolling papers, and give him a job for the cia. how about they do that? they should hire him. they should bring him in and say, look, we could throw you in the
have text messages, we have voice messages. we have all sorts of stuff, pictures. do we really want law enforcement to rifle through this information? and where s the firewall? pursuant to this proposed law, they re only supposedly supposed to look at the data. how do they do it? commissioner, can t they do it after the fact? can t they actually access the phone then? call nsa. call verizon. they can do a letter. they do it all the time. if they re concerned about the cell phone information being destroyed is a text message self-preserved? no. three to seven days according to the carrier. are they really looking at the text message itself or the data history? it has to address data usage.
have text messages, we have voice messages. we have all sorts of stuff, pictures. do we really want law enforcement to rifle through this information? and where s the firewall? pursuant to this proposed law, they re only supposedly supposed to look at the data. how do they do it? commissioner, can t they do it after the fact? can t they actually access the phone then? call nsa. call verizon. they can do a letter. they do it all the time. if they re concerned about the cell phone information being destroyed is a text message self-preserved? no. three to seven days according to the carrier. are they really looking at the text message itself or the data history? it has to address data usage.