Become a fan of Slashdot on Facebook

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Apple

Apple Watch's Fall Detection Could Get Users Into Legal Trouble (arstechnica.com) 125

AmiMoJo writes: Apple has released more details about how the Watch 4 will contact emergency services if the watch detects that you've had a hard fall. If the watch detects that the wearer is "immobile for about a minute," it begins a 15-second countdown. After that, the Watch will contact emergency services.

Elizabeth Joh, a law professor at the University of California, Davis, was quick to point out that, by inviting the police into your home, Apple Watch wearers may be opening themselves up to criminal liability. If police are alerted by an Apple Watch of a possible injury, they do not need a warrant to enter a home under the "community caretaking" exception to the Fourth Amendment.

Any evidence of a crime in plain view (e.g. a joint) could land the owner in trouble.

The article notes the "(mostly) opt-in nature" of the service, though one New York-based criminal defense attorney had an even better idea.

He said he "would much prefer a feature that can automatically dial a user-determined contact."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Watch's Fall Detection Could Get Users Into Legal Trouble

Comments Filter:
  • by garote ( 682822 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @02:45PM (#57395720) Homepage

    These issues are not newly raised by the watch.

    I can only surmise that the reason the watch doesn't ask for voice confirmation before dialing is, they assume the wearer is unconscious. If the wearer wakes up later in the hospital and is enraged about criminal charges for a joint spotted on their table, they have their priorities out of whack.

    Likewise if the wearer experiences some head injury or loss of blood pressure and is too delirious to notice and abort the countdown. Probably better off summoning medical personnel.

    Of course there is plenty of room for improvement. There's no reason the watch couldn't make a unique beeping sound as it counts down to remind the wearer to disable it. There's no reason it couldn't alert emergency services AND text/email/call a list of contacts. There's no reason not to allow customizations like "slide to call" rather than "slide to cancel", at the wearer's own risk.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @02:59PM (#57395822)

      I can only surmise that the reason the watch doesn't ask for voice confirmation before dialing is, they assume the wearer is unconscious.

      According to TFA, it does ask for confirmation. It dials if there is no response.

      criminal charges for a joint spotted on their table ...

      I live in California. Pot is legal here.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        The meth lab might be problematic, though.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      its basically like OnStar but instead of monitoring airbag deployment and impact collision, it monitors the user. As long as laws get changed to restrict police arrest to crimes that are imminent danger to self or others, such as discovering human trafficking, it could be of some medical benefit. Its these legal backdoors to our bill of rights that concern me the most. What good is saving a life if it is spent incarcerated?

    • Of course there is plenty of room for improvement. There's no reason the watch couldn't make a unique beeping sound as it counts down to remind the wearer to disable it. There's no reason it couldn't alert emergency services AND text/email/call a list of contacts. There's no reason not to allow customizations like "slide to call" rather than "slide to cancel", at the wearer's own risk.

      I think the Watch already does ALL of those things, actually. It vibrates on your wrist for that minute to try to get your attention, it alerts your emergency contacts if you’ve opted to have them alerted, and “slide to call” is simply its normal behavior, which you you can make the default by never enabling the detection.

  • A joint isn't a crime, man. It is just a plant. In many states in the US it is legal as well. A joint will only get you a misdemeanor at most, not a felony as the lawyer claims.
    • A joint isn't a crime, man. It is just a plant.

      And it’s not even mine!

    • Well, actually, it's a federal crime no matter where in the USA you live, and no matter what your local laws say.

      • Who cares? Not me. Take a chill pill, man.
        • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

          Who cares? Not me. Take a chill pill, man.

          I think the whole point of the article is that you *would* care if you drop your watch and don't notice that it just invited the police into your house while you left your joint on the kitchen table in plain sight. If you don't smoke pot, then maybe you don't care about this particular risk, but nearly everyone is in violation of *some* law, like maybe your mom left her vicodin prescription in your bathroom, oops, now you're guilty of possession of a controlled drug without a prescription.

      • > it's a federal crime

        I can lay my hand on No part of the U.S. constitution that allows Congress to outlaw a naturally-growing plant. It took an amendment to give them the power to outlaw alcohol, and the same requirement applies to weed.

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          No, it just takes the Supreme Court to rule that the Constitution says that Congress can outlaw a plant. There are various reasons that it is Constitutional from national security to interstate commerce.

    • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

      It's a crime against your body - especially a dislocated joint.

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      this depends on the state. Not every state looks the other way, and if you leave it up to local authorities it becomes inconsistent between bigger cities and more rural towns. Indiana is a good example of this. I work in Louisville and KY has a policy that possession (not distribution) of less than 8 oz is considered a misdemeanor $100 fine for the _first_ offence. After that it is back to disproportionate punitive measures. However, because under 8oz is a misdemeanor it does give sworn officers the flexibi

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @02:55PM (#57395784)

    How little faith do you have in your emergency services for this to be on the list of concerns?

    • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

      Police are dispatched to every ambulance call in my city/state. There was an emergency responder that was shot in the line of duty attempting to save another life. Officers are 'sworn' to uphold the law. That means they technically are not allowed to use good judgement to overlook illicit or illegal activity because they are sworn to arrest/report to the DA. Unless another law or policy tells them to look the other way, they HAVE to intervene. They do not have any latitude to make the call. This is reserve

      • Unless another law or policy tells them to look the other way, they HAVE to intervene. They do not have any latitude to make the call.

        That is horseshit. Not what you said, but rather the situation you ultimately find your country in. My neighbour (not in America) experienced just that judgement call when his roommate did a bit of thieving and they police came and searched his home. They found among the jewelry they were looking for a marijuana pot plant and my neighbour's still. They asked if they belonged to him, he said yes, and they told him if they have to come back to the house for something else they don't want to see either item ag

        • by e3m4n ( 947977 )

          this is the ugly undocumented result of people demanding equality. It doesn't even have to happen in your town. When a town riots because some guy, with a gun, gets shot by a cop, policies pop up everywhere. Sometimes the video even clearly shows a justified lethal response, but people riot anyway. They end up rioting for a blended image of past injustices but still verbally insist this incident is another case of injustice. So then the departments start digging into every perceived chance of injustice. Lat

    • by Anonymous Coward

      In America, having the police respond to your home is a very bad idea. Your chance of being arrested on some bullshit charge or being shot dead because the officer felt "threatened" goes through the roof. No thank you.

  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @02:56PM (#57395792) Homepage

    In general the fall detection of the iPhone is a gimmick - Apple seems to be running out of ideas for things that can set them apart. The obvious issue is that it is marketed as mainly for older people, but older people susceptible to falls are usually not the target demographic of a device that needs to go on the charger every 2 days! What's more, I don't know the stats, but I would assume going to the bathroom in the middle of the night must account for a respectable percentage of falls, but your watch would probably be on the charger. Unless you have 2 Apple watches?
    That would not be enough to condemn it as a gimmick perhaps if there did not exist dedicated fall alert devices that had none of the disadvantages of an Apple watch. I suspect with those devices you also don't invite the police to your house (assuming the article is correct and the Apple watch might do so), they usually alert a specialized EMT service.
    At least it is opt-in, so a less annoying feature than what the iPhone X brought. Yes, while Face ID seems to work well and some people like it (I am not a fan myself), the decision to put it in a "notch" was very bad. Now every phone maker out there just copies the "notch" without actually any hardware or functionality similar to Face ID, and pretends to be an iPhoneX-equivalent, or one of the "cool kids'. I'll have to wait until this notch idiocy dies out before upgrading my phone.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      A bunch of assumptions (some of which I can tell you are false without even having to research them), some stereotypes, agism and a personal dislike for Apple...

      What a great rebuttal!

      Jesus fuck, is this really the kind of shit we're putting up with in 2018? Fucking small-dick fagbois pouring out their rage about nothing. What a great thing the internet has become.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @02:58PM (#57395818)

    As someone who has rolled out lone-worker / man-down alert systems before, 15 seconds is not long enough to prevent false alarms. Even with careful training, and even when a person knows they are wearing a dedicated man down device, the number of false alarms these things generate are incredibly high when not given a shitload of time for the user to respond.

    Rather than worrying about police rummaging through your house looking for your weed stash while you lay unconscious on the floor, I'd be more concerned with getting fined for repeated false alarms in jurisdictions that allow for such.

  • Or if you want to commit a crime, don't turn on features that call the cops.

    As for the example (a joint), if you are doing drugs and fall and can't stop the alert within 15 seconds, maybe you really need help. Sure, you will get into legal trouble, but that's still better than being dead.

    Still agree with the idea of a used defined contact, especially since phones already have "ICE" contacts that can be called from a locked screen for that reason.

    • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

      Or if you want to commit a crime, don't turn on features that call the cops.

      How would you even know if you're committing a crime? No one can keep track of all of the laws, there are over 300,000 federal laws and regulations that can result in criminal prosecution and over 70% of people have comitted one or more jailable offenses.

      https://www.politifact.com/pun... [politifact.com]

      Some may seem innocuous like 'If a doctor gave you a prescription for the common painkiller vicodin and your spouse brings it to you as you lie in bed, "your spouse is dispensing a controlled substance without a license,"' b

      • by ilctoh ( 620875 )
        You're not wrong, but you're overlooking some practical matters.

        My 86 year old grandmother could benefit from this device (and, in fact, uses a competing product purpose-built for fall detection that automatically places a 911 call when triggered.) My grandmother is statistically pretty likely to have need of this device at some point during the remaining years of her life. She's statistically pretty unlikely to be arrested, charged or convicted of a crime that police happened to notice/fabricate when t

  • If you had it call a friend, and they took time to clean things up before calling for help, they could also be in legal limbo and possible civil lawsuits for not getting emergency medical help needed immediately.

  • by e3m4n ( 947977 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @03:13PM (#57395914)

    In my state (KY but possibly others), we created a law that when 911 was called for an overdose that everyone at the scene was safe from prosecution of crimes such as possession etc. Could this law be expanded or interpreted to include 911 calls made by an apple watch?

    http://www.lrc.ky.gov/statutes... [ky.gov]

  • by McGruber ( 1417641 ) on Saturday September 29, 2018 @03:26PM (#57395982)
    Thursday, Internet of Shit retweeted this: [twitter.com]

    Rayn@RyPatts

    So I apparently fell down 627 stairs then stopped moving for over 5 minutes. An ambulance showed up at the house along with my mum who let them in.

    Tip: don't wear your new Apple Watch whilst having some alone time. Thanks Apple.

    Lesson learned: Don't wear your Apple Watch while masturbating.

  • How is this opening up users into getting into legal trouble if said user wasn't actually doing anything against the law before the watch contacted first responders?

    I thought maybe this was about something to do with an automated call to emergency services without human intervention, but no.... the legal trouble that the article mentions, of all things, is that when the police come in, they could find prohibited substances in the premises??? Stuff that wasn't supposed to be there in the first place?

    Fo

  • He said he "would much prefer a feature that can automatically dial a user-determined contact."

    This is also a bit problematic. What if that contact doesn't answer the phone, or it goes to voicemail, what's the service to do then? What if a stranger picks up the phone, or it's an old number, etc, etc.

    There's probably a few people who would do well with that feature but I'm guessing most user-determined contacts wouldn't respond appropriately if a call ever came in. And I suspect that first responders are fai

  • ...it keeping track of dates/times a person has fallen. This record could easily be used by relatives to get conservatorship over a senior citizen against their will.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      If you've fallen so much that a court will grant conservatorship against your will, then you're in a bad situation. I understand some elderly really don't want to go into a home or be cared for by family, but some of them actually need to be and shouldn't be driving around or living by themselves anymore.

      The data is still private unless it calls the ambulance, if you obtain the data illegally or without consent, that's still illegal so your conservatorship suit turns into a civil or criminal lawsuit and you

  • I don't need a watch to tell me its FALL.

  • I am not sure, but I think it would be illegal for a device to call 911 automatically. It is certainly that way with home alarm systems. So I don't see how this would be any different.

    Samsung seems to know the correct way to handle this- on their watches, the user sets up, in advance, people that it will automatically text and call if there is an emergency. Then those HUMANS can try to determine if the situation warrants EMS and be the points of initiation and contact. Maybe Apple can "invent" that now.

  • automatically dial a user-determined contact

    That requires an input field which would totally ruin the clean look of the UI!

  • Quote: "He said he "would much prefer a feature that can automatically dial a user-determined contact."

    Yeah, it's called making the patient the focus of your system. That's what smart systems do: http://aetonix.com/ [aetonix.com]
    The Apple watch caters to making it easy for the corporation i.e. no finicky designing choice for the users. Maybe Mr. Jobs was labeled an ass to work for because we've only been hearing from the people he called out for doing a shitty job.

Real Users know your home telephone number.

Working...