NEW YORK (AP) — Twitter must give a court about three months' worth of an Occupy Wall Street protester's tweets, a judge said in a ruling released Monday after the company fought prosecutors' demand for the messages.
Manhattan Criminal Court Judge Matthew A. Sciarrino Jr. rebuffed one of Twitter Inc.'s
central arguments, which concerned who has rights to contest law
enforcement demands for content posted on its site. But the judge said
the company was right on a separate point that could require prosecutors
to take further steps if they want to see one particular day of Malcolm Harris' tweets and his user information.
Sciarrino
also decided that he would review all the material he ordered turned
over and would provide "relevant portions" to prosecutors.
The
case began as one of hundreds of disorderly conduct prosecutions
stemming from an Oct. 1 Occupy march on the Brooklyn Bridge, but it has
evolved into a closely watched legal tussle over law enforcement
agencies' access to material posted on social networks.
The
Manhattan district attorney's office said Harris' messages could show
whether he was aware of police orders he's charged with disregarding.
Twitter, meanwhile, said the case could put it in the unwanted position
of having to take on legal fights that users could otherwise conduct on
their own.
The DA's office said it was pleased with the ruling,
which came after the judge turned down Harris' own request earlier this
year to block prosecutors from subpoenaing his tweets and user
information from Sept. 15 to Dec. 31.
"We
look forward to Twitter's complying and to moving forward with the
trial," Chief Assistant District Attorney Daniel R. Alonso said in a
statement.
Twitter called the ruling disappointing and said it was considering its next move.
"We continue to have a steadfast commitment to our users and their rights," the company said in a statement.
Harris' lawyer, Martin Stolar, said he was studying the ruling to determine how to respond.
Harris
was among more than 700 people arrested in the Brooklyn Bridge march.
Police said demonstrators ignored warnings to stay on a pedestrian path
and went onto the roadway. Harris, an editor for an online culture
magazine, and others say they thought they had police permission to go
on the roadway.
He challenged
the subpoena for his tweets, saying prosecutors' bid for user
information, alongside the messages, breached privacy and
free-association rights. The data could give prosecutors a picture of
his followers, their interactions through replies and retweets, and his
location at various points, Stolar said.
Prosecutors said the
tweets might contradict Harris' claim that he thought protesters were
allowed on the roadway. And they said he couldn't invoke privacy rights
for messages he sent very publicly, though some stopped being visible
when newer ones crowded them out.
Sciarrino
ruled in April that Harris didn't have a proprietary interest in his
tweets and so couldn't challenge the subpoena, which was issued to
Twitter.
Then San
Francisco-based Twitter went to court on Harris' behalf, saying he had
every right to fight the subpoena. Its user agreements say that users
own content they post and can challenge demands for their records, and
it would be "a new and overwhelming burden" for Twitter to have to
champion such causes for them, the company argued in a court filing.
The judge said the company's argument didn't overcome his view that privacy protections don't apply to Harris' tweets.
"If
you post a tweet, just like if you scream it out the window, there is
no reasonable expectation of privacy," wrote the social media-savvy Sciarrino, who laced his previous ruling with the hashtag marks used to mark key words in tweets.
Twitter
prevailed on another argument: that some of the tweets shouldn't be
turned over because a federal law requires a court-approved search
warrant, not just a subpoena issued by prosecutors, for stored
electronic communications that are less than 180 days old.
Sciarrino
found that law did apply — but only to Harris' tweets and information
for Dec. 31, since the rest were more than 180 days old by the Saturday
of the ruling. It was released Monday.
Prosecutors'
bid for the tweets had spurred concern among electronic privacy and
civil liberties advocates, and some cheered Twitter's decision to take
up the fight at a time when authorities increasingly seek to mine social
networks for information.
Monday's
ruling "continued to fail to grapple with one of the key issues
underlying this case: do individuals give up their ability to go to
court to try to protect their free speech and privacy rights when they
use the Internet? ... The answer has to be no," said Aden Fine, a staff
attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, which had filed a
friend-of-the-court brief backing Twitter's position.
Harris' case is set for trial in December.
Resource : Yahoo News
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