What A Day - How Data Tracking Could Be Used To Prosecute Abortion
Episode Date: May 11, 2022As the Supreme Court considers overturning or scaling back Roe, online privacy and pro-choice advocates are concerned about how police might use data from someone’s phone or computer to prosecute or... charge them for seeking an abortion in states where it could be deemed illegal. Sara Morrison, a senior reporter for Recode, joins us to discuss the need for more data privacy laws in a post-Roe world.Parents nationwide are facing extreme difficulty feeding their newborns amid a widespread shortage of baby formula. Nearly 40 percent of retail stores across the country are out of stock of formula, and over half of U.S. states have out-of-stock rates as high as 50 percent.And in headlines: Protests continue in Sri Lanka following months of food and fuel shortages, the House of Representatives voted to pass a $39.8 billion aid package for Ukraine, and gasoline climbed to its highest national average price ever.Show Notes:Recode: “What police could find out about your illegal abortion” – https://bit.ly/3smK6ntMother Jones: “Meet Abortion Bans’ New Best Friend—Your Phone” – https://bit.ly/38l0aPNBan Off Our Bodies Rally on May 14th – https://bit.ly/3P1KxgNDonate to abortion funds, take action and more via Vote Save America – votesaveamerica.com/roeFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/whataday/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Wednesday, May 11th.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And I am Priyanka Arabindi.
And this is What A Day, the podcast that gives you all the news in less time than it takes
the Senate to pass a bill giving police protection to the families of Supreme Court justices.
Yes.
And to be clear, they do that very fast.
You know, just like What A Day, They can be extremely efficient when need be.
On today's show, there is a nationwide shortage of baby formula. Plus,
President Biden says tackling inflation is his number one domestic priority.
But first, we want to continue the conversation we have been having about what could happen
if Roe v. Wade is overturned in the next month or so by the Supreme Court.
We have talked on the show before about how abortion would definitely or likely become illegal in at least 26 states if Roe were overturned.
But Gideon, you also wanted to talk about how police could go about enforcing a ban on abortion.
So tell us a little more about how that could happen. Yeah. So one thing that we don't always think about is how data from our phones, computers,
tablets, and apps could be used by law enforcement to investigate crimes. That's in addition to what
anything private companies might do with your data on their own. We hear horror stories about that
pretty often. And to your point, as the Supreme Court considers overturning or scaling back row online privacy and pro-choice advocates are concerned about how police might
use data from someone's apps, Google searches, or even their location to prosecute or charge them
for seeking an abortion in states where it could be deemed illegal. And police are just allowed to
access that data whenever they want. What is the deal here? How does that work?
Yeah, I mean, with some limitations, they basically can.
There's a Recode article by Sarah Morrison that describes how law enforcement already
uses data as evidence in all sorts of investigations.
For example, in 2017, a woman in Mississippi who had a stillborn child was suspected of
having an abortion.
Police went through her search history and found that she looked into abortion-inducing drugs, and then they used that as evidence to charge her with second
degree murder. Now, those charges were later dropped, but stories like that are enough to
make people worry that police could use those tactics more often if Roe is ultimately overturned.
Right. A terrifying prospect. So you actually got to talk to reporter Sarah Morrison about all of this.
Tell us a little more about how that conversation went.
Yeah.
So I started off by asking her about so-called data brokers that collect and sell people's
online information, usually to private businesses, and what kind of information they have that
could be handed over to law enforcement.
The problem with there being so much data about us collected and so many things that
we use all the time is that the answer is, you know, kind of everything.
Mobile apps, a lot of these things are free because they take a lot of data from you,
sometimes through like trackers and things in apps and on websites.
Conceivably, there's a lot of information about you they could get that way. And we do know that law enforcement does buy data
from these data brokers.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement has used it
to try to find entry points for undocumented immigrants.
I think the IRS was using it.
The FBI uses it.
The military uses it.
And they all can because there's no law telling them
that you can't just buy evidence
that you would otherwise maybe have to get a warrant for.
Right. And your article when you're writing about this mentioned other sort of sweeping examples of where this could be a problem.
Like, for example, an Internet search for abortion inducing drugs.
Can you talk about some of those examples and how they are worrisome potentially in this world we might be looking at in a few months?
So that because more of an issue if, you know, like we said, let's say abortions are illegal,
and then police can, you know, get court orders, penance, warrants, whatever, to find, you know,
your data. Like, this isn't stuff that they can really buy from data brokers. This is the stuff
that they have to go through legal channels to do. And then the problem is that that stuff is
there for them to get. If you look at maybe for some
people these are not the most sympathetic case but the January 6th insurrectionists you know a lot of
the the cases against them they would say Google give us the devices that were in this location
the Capitol building at this time and then from there they could say here are the people that we
believe were there and then give us more information about. And so when you look at a case like an abortion, if they suspect you of having had one,
and then they know that you went to a place, maybe there's a law that you can't leave the
state to get one, but they know that you let the state to go to someplace where it was legal.
That's all stuff that's there. So that's all stuff that they can get. There's really nothing
stopping these companies from collecting it.
And there's not a lot stopping the police from getting it either.
And going back a little bit to some apps that serve more kind of specific purposes, namely,
we've seen a lot of apps relating to period tracking, for example, that have come up in
a lot of these articles and reporting about all of this.
So what have those sorts of apps done, if anything, to protect user data?
Period apps come up a lot.
And actually, period apps are kind of an interesting case because there have been a couple of them that have gotten in trouble for not protecting user data the way they said that they would or not protecting it as well as they should have.
Like I've heard, you know, somebody asked me, OK, well, HIPAA is a medical privacy law.
These are medical apps, right?
Doesn't HIPAA apply?
No, it doesn't.
HIPAA does not apply to apps that deal with health just because they have the word health in them.
You said that there really isn't something, legally speaking, that forces these kinds of requirements on various companies.
So what are some of the legislative efforts to provide people protection of their info that are kind
of in the works? So we'll say like some states do have some laws like California actually,
I believe has the strongest consumer privacy law in the country. So the companies that operate in
those states or the people live in them have more protections. Like you can ask to have your data
deleted. You can opt out of stuff like that. The problem is I don't live in California. I don't know where you live, but I'm going to assume that a lot of your audience doesn't
live there either. So those protections don't apply to you. So when you talk about like at a
federal level and a federal privacy law, these things have been proposed. You know, there's a
bill Senator Ron Wyden and I think Rand Paul actually put forward called the Fourth Amendment is not
for sale act, which basically says you cannot buy data from data brokers to use in your
criminal investigations that you would otherwise have to get a warrant for. I don't think there's
been a federal bill about this. I'm not sure, but I think there's one in New York that would say
you can't just go to say Google and go, I want a list of all the devices in this area at this time.
Right.
And then I'll try to narrow them down into who I think did something wrong.
It sort of means that a bunch of innocent people's devices get wrapped in that, too.
Or you can't do what are called keyword searches, warrants, which is who searched for a particular word, like abortion pills.
And then you go to consumer privacy laws like that would apply to
everybody. Things that require companies to minimize how much data they actually collect.
So there aren't like all these extra stuff out there that they don't need. Things where they
have to get our permission to collect it at all. And then they have to get our permission to sell
or share it with somebody else. That kind of stuff that just, again, puts the control in our hands
over what of our information is given to who
and even gives us the ability to take it back
or delete it if we want it to.
If something's illegal,
the police are within their rights
to get data that helps their case.
But if that data is not there to get in the first place,
then it's not there.
Yeah, I was going to say, are there sort of other individual recommendations that would
kind of make sense for people to at least think about in terms of what they are doing here?
This is sort of always a hard one, because I don't ever want to tell people that there's
this way that you can prevent, you know, all of your data from being collected or any of it.
Right.
I would tell people to go through their phones
and see which apps they actually use,
which ones they actually need,
and get rid of the ones that they don't.
A lot of apps now, or websites now,
sort of offer these opt-out of having your data
collected or shared.
And then things that have encryption,
so messaging apps like Signals One,
where if the police go to those companies and say, we have a warrant, give us the data. They actually don't have that data for the
police to get in the first place. If nothing else, I hope it's just a good reminder to people that
all of these things are happening. They're all collecting data about you. There are ways to
reduce it. There are things you can ask your lawmakers to do, aside from all the other things
we have to ask our lawmakers to do. But maybe that could be on your list. And Priyanka, that was my conversation with Sarah Morrison,
senior reporter for Recode. We are going to link to her article in our show notes.
Yeah. And while we're dealing with blows to abortion access in this country, let's turn to
another story that we're following. Parents nationwide are facing extreme difficulty
feeding the newborns that they already
have. So for months, the U.S. has been dealing with shortages of baby formula that have taken
many of the leading brands off of the shelves nationwide. Nearly 40 percent of retail stores
are out of stock of formula, and over half of U.S. states have out of stock rates as high as 50
percent. Normally, those rates are under 10%, so clearly something is not
right here. Yeah, this seems truly unheard of, and it's obviously an enormous problem for parents
who rely on formula to feed their young children. What do we know has actually caused this shortage?
Yeah, so this didn't happen immediately. There have been months of shortages due to supply chain
issues, you know, much like a bunch of other
things in our economy. But this has been exacerbated by a recall of products by major formula
manufacturer Abbott Laboratories. Abbott had to recall a few of its products due to contamination
and was forced to close its largest U.S. formula manufacturing plant back in February. As you said,
this is a huge problem. Obviously infants can be breastfed,
but that is easier said than done for many people. Not always accessible for everybody or for every
family. Many parents use formula to supplement breast milk or in the place of it, and this is
really affecting those people. This is especially dangerous as well for some infants who require
specialty formulas due
to allergies and other conditions. Abbott's recall in particular also affected several
brands that were covered by federal assistance, though some substitutions are now being allowed.
Yeah, and HuffPost did some reporting on this earlier this week, and they found that
several senators were fully unaware of this very crisis that we're speaking of.
Yeah.
So who is helping here?
And what is actually being done to address this?
Yeah, so it appears that when you are 85 years old,
you're not really buying a bunch of baby formula.
So probably not.
Apparently, this isn't on their radars.
But it is on the radar of Senate hopeful and former Iowa representative Abby Finkenauer.
She has had a plan on this for over a month now.
Fortunately, the White House seems a lot more aware that this is an issue as well.
Here is a clip of White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki when she was asked about this on Monday.
Take a listen.
What the FDA is doing, which while they're independent, they are part of the administration,
is taking a number of steps to address.
That includes working with major infant formula manufacturers to ensure they're increasing production
because part of this issue is, of course, making sure their stock on the shelves,
right? And working with the industry right now to optimize their supply lines, product sizes,
to increase capacity and prioritizing product lines that are of greatest need.
She also said that the FDA is working, quote, around the clock on this issue,
though some industry professionals do say it'll be hard to fix this issue quickly
because the FDA does require extensive testing
and inspections and labeling of these products.
One thing that they do wanna make clear though
is that if you or anyone you know
is experiencing this issue,
can't find formula to feed your infant,
contact your pediatrician's office or your local food bank.
They really do not want people trying to water down formula
to make it last longer or trying some recipe from online.
Please call your pediatrician's office if this is an issue.
Yeah, online recipes are for rigatoni, you know.
Yeah, rigatoni, cookies, you know, sheet pan salmon, go for it.
Not for baby formula.
And that is the latest for now.
Let's get to some headlines.
Protests continue in Sri Lanka following months of food and fuel shortages and yesterday things
escalated when the government ordered troops to open fire on anyone quote looting public property
or causing harm to life this order came after protests turned violent on monday leaving seven
people dead these demonstrations have been going on since early april but people say that they will
continue to protest the government for not doing more to help Sri Lanka's worst economic crisis in its history.
Ultimately, demonstrators want the president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, to step down.
And on Monday, his brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, resigned.
Following the prime minister's resignation, he and his family evacuated from their home in the capital, Colombo, early Tuesday morning.
This happened after protesters set fire to the family's ancestral home in another part of the island.
In the U.S., the House of Representatives voted to pass a $39.8 billion aid package for Ukraine late last night.
Lawmakers brought the supplemental bill forward just days after President Biden warned that the existing aid for Ukraine would soon run dry.
Initially, this bill was going to be a dual package for COVID relief and Ukraine aid,
but Republicans did not support linking the two together. So instead, this bipartisan deal
includes more funding for things like food, weapons, and help for Ukrainian refugees.
In a letter to her Democratic colleagues, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called this a, weapons, and help for Ukrainian refugees. In a letter to her Democratic colleagues,
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called this a, quote,
monumental package of security, economic, and humanitarian aid.
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said the Senate will quickly pass
this nearly $40 billion bill and send it to the president's desk for signing.
This all comes after President Biden signed a new version
of the World War II-era Lend-Lease Act on Monday,
allowing for the faster movement of arms to Ukraine.
And all of this speaks to how much more the U.S. is, in fact, engaged in the war.
Though the New York Times reports that Biden was apparently furious about leaks
showing that U.S. intelligence had helped Ukraine take out Russian generals
and the sinking of a cruiser.
We are getting some more insight into how North Carolina Congressman
Madison Cawthorn became a viral video sensation last week, if you want to call it that. I don't,
but it's fine. Yesterday, both the Daily Beast and the Washington Post published reports on the
forces within the Republican Party that are trying to crush Cawthorn's chances in his North Carolina
primary next Tuesday. Cawthorn rose fast in the
Republican Party and scored Trump's endorsement in this year's race last spring. But a string of
recent leaks have done damage to his re-election campaign. They include the viral video I mentioned
showing Cawthorn naked and humping his friend in a way you could describe as non-sexual, but
very aggressive, weird, definitely not approved by the official political party of homophobia,
we can tell you that much.
Cawthorn's many controversies began far earlier than that, though.
They include bringing guns through TSA,
a thing he has done twice.
Twice.
Allegations of sexual harassment,
and calling Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky a thug.
Let me just note that
we didn't even get to the coke and orgies in this. Didn't even make the cut, which is wild.
When Cawthorn accuses colleagues of doing coke and orgies and all that other stuff on a podcast.
That time, which didn't even make the initial list of like three or four things that he did,
which is how you really know. This is an extensive list.
It is.
Anyways, it is these
actions plus a lack of deference to party elders that have mobilized people like North Carolina
Senator Tom Tillis against him. Tillis and several other prominent Republicans in the state have
endorsed Cawthorn's opponent in next week's primary, State Senator Chuck Edwards. I'm sure he
is still terrible. And allied conservative PACs are spending hundreds of thousands of dollars
on anti-Cawthorn ads and mailers.
In other midterm news, West Virginia and Nebraska held their primary elections yesterday.
One noteworthy detail, the man Trump endorsed in the Nebraska governor's race,
Charles Herbster, has been accused by eight women of inappropriate touching.
Just, I guess, par for the course for these people.
The results were still coming in when we went to record,
but he was on track to lose.
Well.
Darn.
Yeah.
I'm not going to investigate everybody else in the primary any further.
The world's second most polarizing liquid after coconut LaCroix,
that's right, gasoline,
climbed to its highest national average price ever yesterday.
$4.37 a gallon, which is a price that still seems low for people living in Los Angeles,
where they would drive over several medians and a fire hydrant for a chance to pay $5.
That's a steal. I'm sorry. That is a steal.
Gas prices rose by 17 cents in the last week alone.
And against this backdrop of pricey gas, President Joe Biden gave
a speech yesterday where he described inflation as his top domestic priority. Inflation is at
eight and a half percent and is rising faster than it has in 40 years. And Republicans are
trying to pin it all on Biden and the Democrats. But in his speech, Biden sought to connect the
dreaded I word back to Republicans, suggesting that his plan to resolve high prices would work,
whereas the only comprehensive Republican plan available, authored by Senator Rick Scott of
Florida, would make things worse. Here is Biden on that point. My plan attacks inflation and grows
the economy by lowering costs for working families, giving workers well-deserved raises,
reducing the deficit by historic levels,
and making big corporations and very wealthiest Americans pay their fair share.
The other path is the ultra-MAGA plan put forward by congressional Republicans to raise taxes on working families, lower the income of American workers,
threaten sacred programs Americans count on like Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, Okay, all due respect, you can play that on one and a half speed if you have places to go.
Later today, I will not get mad at you.
To me, the right choice between these two plans is pretty clear, and it's not the one that cuts Social Security. Honestly, though, I do want to go to the grocery store without being
scared of the numbers at the cash register. That would be nice. I would like to do literally any
activity that requires spending money without being slightly terrified at what that number
is going to be. What a concept. Would love to see it sometime soon. Yeah, that would be beautiful.
Larger numbers mean more math, and more math means more fear. And those are the headlines. We'll be back after
some ads to celebrate the life of the device that put music in our pockets.
It is Wednesday, WOD Squad, and today we are doing a segment called WOD Remembers,
where we bid a fond farewell to something that is not a person,
but has still enriched our lives over the years and is still about to be dead.
The device that allowed many of us to connect with the other quiet kid on the school bus,
the iPod, is officially being discontinued 21 years after it was launched.
That is a long time and makes me feel ancient. Yeah. Apple announced yesterday that it has
stopped making the iPod touch, which was last updated in 2019. If you want to put a thousand
songs in your pocket, now you'll have to buy an iPhone or a Samsung Galaxy or one of the other
small electronic rectangles, which are our
constant companions and tormentors. Apple also noted that the, quote, spirit of the iPod lives
on in devices like the iPad and the Apple Watch. Some of us may beg to differ, but it's fine.
Reflecting on that spirit and how it's moved us over the years, Gideon, would you like to share
with us your fondest memories of the recently deceased iPod? I have a few. I want to start off by saying that the sound of the
clicking wheel is one of the most sort of iconic, immediate Pavlov dog type situation where I'm like,
loved it. It brings me back like to specific moments in time in a way that are insane.
That's beautiful i also
remember how big the different evolutions felt right so we went from like the big clunky guy
in like a large case with like wired headphones to like you know my brief stint with the nano
which like to be clear i don't think is that good because you couldn't actually like see a screen or anything. All of those evolutions felt like really huge jumps in the way that we don't quite have now.
Now it's like if you get a new one, maybe there's like, you know, a couple emojis or whatever
difference. That was just fun. I was sad because I got I mean, I was young when the iPod came out,
which is not a flex for anyone listening. But I was. So I didn't get one until after they
got rid of the buttons that were on. Do you remember there were like buttons on the actual
iPod that you could press along with the wheel? Oh, I never had that either. But I always thought
those ones look so cool. Yeah. It's very sad that I missed out on that era. And then, you know,
some are cool, some are misses. But, you know, I loved my iPod. I have one less happy memory of an iPod.
It was a family member who thought they were being funny, I guess,
decided to swap our iPods, took my iPod out of its case, put their iPod in it.
And I was like, okay, this isn't my iPod.
Like, excuse me, what?
They eventually obviously fessed up and was like, it was a joke, it was a joke.
And it was like, okay, what part of this was funny?
I now don't like you. This is probably 20 years ago at this point to this day still don't like this person uh i won't be using names because my parents do listen to this podcast
but um they know who they are and they know i still hate them wow um well one day we will sort
that out uh as one extended family and have everybody talk about it. But that was WOD
Remembers. Thank you always to Apple for putting music in our pocket.
That is all for today. If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review,
spin the click wheel one last time and tell your friends to listen. And if you're into
reading and not just low numbers on the
cash register like me,
what a day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out and subscribe at crooked.com
slash subscribe. I'm Priyanka
Arabindi. I'm Gideon Resnick.
And we'll never forget you, iPod.
Having the cord
connected to like the family
CPU to charge it and also to get the music off of the
computer. What a time. What a time. It was like a six step process to get to your music and kids
these days will never understand the effort we had to go through. Lime wire, like the birth of
all of that just to have shit on my iPod. What a time. What a time.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed
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Our head writer
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