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The single best thing we can do to restore privacy and challenge screwy law enforcement is to end Third Party Doctrine.

The third-party doctrine is a United States legal doctrine that holds that people who voluntarily give information to third parties—such as banks, phone companies, internet service providers (ISPs), and e-mail servers—have "no reasonable expectation of privacy." A lack of privacy protection allows the United States government to obtain information from third parties without a legal warrant and without otherwise complying with the Fourth Amendment prohibition against search and seizure without probable cause and a judicial search warrant.

Ref: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third-party_doctrine

The other is to avoid FANGG lie the plagues they are!
Normal people don’t do that, so it makes you look pretty suspect!
I would suggest that referring to the (federal) State as "we" is somewhat naive. Perhaps you should say: "The best thing we could do... is try to force the US federal government to end Third Party Doctrine."

Unfortunately, the populace couldn't even get the government to cover treatment for Covid patients during an f'ing pandemic, or to update the minimum wage after well over a decade of erosion. Or to leave Afghanistan after 20 years. etc.

I don't think this is relevant here. In this case ICE appeared to have a subpoena.
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as european I was wondering what In Case of Emergency phone contact has to do with privacy

than I read about near nazi dystopian immigration police, ohhhh right

In Case of Emergency phone contacts are a really old Facebook meme with no real world use. The ambulance driver can’t unlock your phone to look at your contact list.

If you want them to be able to lookup an emergency contact, use your phone OS’s way to register one.

On iPhone: register an emergency contact in the Health app under ‘Medical ID’

On Android as far as I know it varies by manufacturer.

Stiker in the outside...