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Status quo, there is no change here.

The old example is the email server administrator. If the email administrator has to view the contents of user messages as a part of regular maintenance and that email administrator notices lawful violations in those user messages they can report it to law enforcement. In that case law enforcement can receive the material without a warrant only if law enforcement never asked for it before it was gifted to them. There are no fourth amendment protections provided to offenders in this scenario of third party accidental discovery. Typically, in these cases the email administrator does not have an affirmed requirement to report lawful violations to law enforcement unless specific laws claim otherwise.

If on the other hand law enforcement approaches that email administrator to fish for illegal user content then that email administrator has become an extension of law enforcement and any evidence discovered cannot be used in a criminal proceeding. Likewise, if the email administrator was intentionally looking through email messages for violations of law even not at the request of law enforcement they are still acting as agents of the law. In that case discovery was intentional and not an unintentional product of system maintenance.

There is a third scenario: obscenity. Obscenity is illegal intellectual property, whether digital or physical, as defined by criminal code. Possession of obscene materials is a violation of criminal law for all persons, businesses, and systems in possession. In that case an email administrator that accidentally discovers obscene material does have a required obligation to report their discoveries, typically through their employer's corporate legal process, to law enforcement. Failures to disclose such discoveries potentially aligns the system provider to the illegal conduct of the violating user.

Google's discovery, though, was not accidental as a result of system maintenance. It was due to an intentional discovery mechanism based on stored hashes, which puts Google's conduct in line with law enforcement even if they specified their conduct in their terms of service. That is why the appeals court claims the district court erred by denying the defendant's right to suppression on fourth amendment grounds.

The saving grace for the district court was a good faith exception, such as inevitable discovery. The authenticity and integrity of the hash algorithm was never in question by any party so no search for violating material was necessary, which established probably cause thus allowing law enforcement reasonable grounds to proceed to trial. No warrant was required because the evidence was likely sufficient at trial even if law enforcement did not directly view image in question, but they did verify the image. None of that was challenged by either party. What was challenged was just Google's conduct.




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