Cops can force suspect to unlock phone with thumbprint, US court rulesjeffw@lemmy.worldmod to News@lemmy.world – 473 points – 2 months agoarstechnica.com164Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentOne second officer, let me just power down my phone real quick.What percent of arrests do you suppose happen with SWAT storming your house with flashbangs?No idea. But it's worth considering that there are cases where you might not have the opportunity to power it down.And what are the percentage of those cases?The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
One second officer, let me just power down my phone real quick.What percent of arrests do you suppose happen with SWAT storming your house with flashbangs?No idea. But it's worth considering that there are cases where you might not have the opportunity to power it down.And what are the percentage of those cases?The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
What percent of arrests do you suppose happen with SWAT storming your house with flashbangs?No idea. But it's worth considering that there are cases where you might not have the opportunity to power it down.And what are the percentage of those cases?The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
No idea. But it's worth considering that there are cases where you might not have the opportunity to power it down.And what are the percentage of those cases?The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
And what are the percentage of those cases?The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.
One second officer, let me just power down my phone real quick.
What percent of arrests do you suppose happen with SWAT storming your house with flashbangs?
No idea. But it's worth considering that there are cases where you might not have the opportunity to power it down.
And what are the percentage of those cases?
The percentage is non-zero. But if you are really concerned about the percentage, you probably shouldn't rely on this method. It's a judgement call.