I'm not so sure about that warrant now

Yesterday I was pretty sure the warrant to search Jason Chen's home was justified, but looking at this, now I'm not so sure:

U.S. Code My lay understanding Relevance
Notwithstanding any other law, it shall be unlawful for a government officer or employee, in connection with the investigation or prosecution of a criminal offense, to search for or seize any work product materials possessed by a person reasonably believed to have a purpose to disseminate to the public a newspaper, book, broadcast, or other similar form of public communication, in or affecting interstate or foreign commerce; The government can't search for materials a reporter is going to report about… Chen reported on the iPhone 4G prototype and how he came to acquire it.
but this provision shall not impair or affect the ability of any government officer or employee, pursuant to otherwise applicable law, to search for or seize such materials, if— (1) there is probable cause to believe that the person possessing such materials has committed or is committing the criminal offense to which the materials relate: …except they can if the reporter committed a crime related to those materials… Chen's buying that phone was arguably a crime and obviously "related" to the phone…
Provided, however, That a government officer or employee may not search for or seize such materials under the provisions of this paragraph if the offense to which the materials relate consists of the receipt, possession, communication, or withholding of such materials or the information contained therein [emphasis added] …except they can't if the crime in question was the actual receipt of those materials. …but that very crime seems to be protected, search-wise.

I got to the cornell.edu page via comments on this article about how the EFF thinks the warrant was not justified. I got to that via John Gruber, who disagrees and quotes the Macalope:

Shorter EFF: buying stolen merchandise is fine as long as you write a story about it.

I agree that seems odd, but from my naive reading, that seems to be what the law says. So I am no longer sure either way. [Update: on second thought, that's not what the law says. The law protects against search and seizure, not against prosecution. The crime is still a crime.] But whatever. People much more qualified than me (i.e., who know what they're talking about) will work it out.

[Update: Yesterday EFF.org posted an article quoting the same part of the law that I did about "if the offense to which the materials relate…".]

iPad 3G? MiFi? iPass?

I have a WiFi-only iPad and it feels like something that should always be online. I feel like I always want to at least have the option at any time to surf the Web, stream Netflix movies, use Yelp to check out restaurants people mention, or take virtual walks in neighborhoods I don't know using Google Maps. Maybe this is just Internet addiction and I should get over it, but for better or worse it's how I feel.

A friend recently informed me of a service called iPass. For just seven bucks a month (with a one-year commitment) you get unlimited WiFi at many affiliated locations such as airports, hotels, McDonald's, and Starbucks.

It's tempting, especially with all the McDonald's and Starbucks locations in New York, but I've been trying to think through when I'm going to actually want WiFi, and whether I should get iPass, get a MiFi, trade up to an iPad 3G when it becomes available, or none of the above.

I have an iPhone 3GS which I can use for email, Google Maps, and web surfing, so my "needs" are technically met most of the time — they're just limited to the phone. The devices I'd love to have mobile Internet for are my laptop and my iPad. The most frequent situation is when I'm in a restaurant alone, which is pretty often. I suspect, though I don't know for sure, that the restaurants I usually go to won't be iPass affiliates or be close enough to one for me to connect via iPass.

I don't travel much any more, so I'm not often in airports or hotels. Would I want to change my dining habits and start going to Starbucks and McDonald's? Would I find myself ducking into a Starbucks and spending a couple of bucks on a beverage I wouldn't have wanted otherwise, just to be able to sit and get online? Will the bandwidth be acceptable with multiple customers all using WiFi in the same location?

I'm not knocking the iPass service, but thinking this through, it might not be for me.

A MiFi would provide mobile Internet to my laptop. Thing is, it would have seemed a decent deal six months ago, but now the pricing feels high compared to AT&T's rates for the iPad 3G. Part of me is trying to convince myself the MiFi would be worth it.

One twist is that with a MiFi I might be able to replace the iPhone with a cheap bare-bones phone, and basically do what Scott Lewis described doing on the iphone-talk mailing list today:

Anybody ditching an iPhone for the iPad/iTouch combo? I just did. Between the $89.99 voice plan, $20 text plan and $30 Internet plan I was at $140 + tax from AT&T. Getting a 3G iPad would add another $30 + tax or closer to $200!

I bought a MiFi (BEFORE anybody talked about that Verizon leaked memo suggesting they market MiFi to iPad customers, mind you). Once the iPad came, I spent about 3 minutes with it, and decided it was ABSOLUTELY fantastic. Within a day or so, a smartphone screen starts to hurt – you just miss that HUGE screen, and the new App UI paradigms.

So now, I have an iPod Touch (for when I need something quick), an iPad (for most other Internet based tasks), a MiFi serving 3G wireless to both 5 hours of battery at a time (plus I carry a small 1800 mAH battery that can charge any of the above). That's $60 a month + tax. I got one of those MetroPCS phones for $40 a month tax INCLUDED. A $30 phone (Samsung candybar, weighs … nothing), that has voice dial and bluetooth support, so I never have to look at it. One USB connection later and a quick run of the free BitPim and my contacts are there, granted they don't sync via MobileMe, but it's not that bad), and I'm saving close to $100 a month. I also now can get wireless off my MacBook in hotels without the $10 to $15 a day charge too, as a plus, and service at those pesky airports (only half have free WiFi). Oh, and Boingo can now suck it, with their monthly charge except for iPhones and iPads that have a SECOND monthly charge. 🙂

Having just paid the pro-rated (slightly) iPhone 3GS cancel fee, I'll make it back within 2 months of not paying $200 a month, and as an added benefit, when the next gen iPhone ships that's too cool to avoid buying, I won't have a contract anymore, and can get it at the subsidized price, and start this nasty cycle all over again.

No, I don't know why my wife thinks I'm insane.

What I like is that now we're talking about spending less money instead of adding paid services.

One drawback is that I'd have to carry more devices. But I bet I could just slip the MiFi into a pants pocket, and I spend very little time making phone calls, so I wouldn't be dealing the with phone much. A bigger drawback is that I'd lose the easy archiving of my SMS conversations that I currently get when I sync the iPhone. Lately I've been having some important SMS conversations about family matters that I feel it's important to archive.

Who knows, maybe Apple will announce AT&T tethering at the iPhone 4.0 presentation tomorrow. That would simplify a lot of this decision making.

E-waste recycling events this weekend and next

The Ecology Center's electronic waste recycling program is a unique and innovative program allowing residents to dispose of working and non-working electronics in an environmentally responsible way. Residents can bring unwanted electronics to our e-waste collection events that take place in neighborhoods throughout the city.

This is a great way to get rid of old techno-junk. I've gotten rid of dead computers, dead hard drives, and assorted other gadgets both working and non-working. It felt great to responsibly dispose of that stuff and to free up space in my miniscule apartment.

  • At Tekserve this Saturday (April 11)
  • At Travers Park (in Queens) this Sunday (April 12)
  • At Habana Outpost (in Brooklyn) the following Saturday (April 17)

Follow this link for hours, exact locations, and what's accepted and what's not.