Sen. Chuck Schumer (DN.Y.) wants to control your smartphone. Yesterday, Schumer went after Google, Apple, and other smartphone-industry players who have refused to follow a “voluntary” request by him and Sens. Harry Reid (D-Nev.), Frank Lautenberg (DN.J.), and Tom Udall (DN.M.) that they ban apps that show where police are setting up driving under the influence (DUI) checkpoints, speed traps, and the like. State officials are applying similar pressure (and are also claiming that all requests for compliance are “voluntary”). Delaware Attorney General Beau Biden, the son of Vice President Joe Biden, is pushing for bans and so is Maryland’s Attorney General Doug Gansler, who likened the apps to “giving a robber the key and the alarm pad code to go rob a bank.” As a direct result of the pressure, Research in Motion, maker of Blackberry products, blocked the apps. But are apps that give citizens more information about what law enforcement is up to a bad thing? They clearly fall under First Amendment guarantees of free expression (that’s why lawmakers are saying their requests are “voluntary”). But perhaps more important, such apps actually minimize drunk driving and speeding – which is one of the reasons why police in places such as Travis County, Texas, are the ones entering the information for DUI checkpoint apps such as Trapster. As a Travis County cop puts it, if he can stop the problematic behavior without writing tickets or hauling people in, everybody is better off …
Posts Tagged ‘ trapster ’
aaa
aaa california
angeles
appid
article
autos & vehicles
beverly
beverly hills
beverly hills news
california
california cops
california news
ca news
car
city
cops
cop update
dui
entertainment
facebook
food
highway
hollywood
info
lakers
la news
lapd
local news
local news. press
los angeles
los angeles news
missing
nba
news
news & politics
news los angeles
police
police chase
police update
press
rest
sports
the-original
triple a
video