Legal battle over Twitter subpoena heats up

(Reuters) – Electronic privacy advocates on Thursday weighed in on a high-stakes legal fight over online communications, arguing that a subpoena seeking an Occupy Wall Street protester’s tweets violates his rights to free speech and privacy.

The filing from the American Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Public Citizen, Inc. supports Twitter’s position that the individual, Occupy protestor Malcolm Harris and not Twitter itself, is the owner of the tweets and thus the proper target for any subpoena.

Manhattan Criminal Court Justice Matthew Sciarrino Jr. had earlier ruled that Harris did not have the standing to challenge the subpoena, which seeks personal information and all of Harris’ tweets from September 15 through December 31, 2011.

Harris was one of 700 protesters arrested on the Brooklyn Bridge during a protest last October.

Prosecutors at the Manhattan District Attorney‘s office said they to needed Harris’ information to determine if the tweets he posted while on the Brooklyn Bridge were “inconsistent with his anticipated trial defense” – that the police either led or escorted protesters into stepping into the roadway.

The case has caught the attention of privacy and free speech advocates, who fear that if the judge upholds the District Attorney’s subpoena, it will undermine a basic tenet of Internet communications in the era of social media: that the author, and not the company whose services are used, is responsible for the content.

Thursday’s brief argues that Harris should have standing to bring a First Amendment challenge because the subpoena would reveal sensitive details about him and his communications.

The motion also asserts that Harris’ Fourth Amendment right against warrantless search has been violated, because the information sought by prosecutors would impair his right to move freely without government surveillance.

Since Twitter users increasingly rely on laptops, iPads or other mobile devices likely to be logged into Twitter government could “reconstruct their movements to conduct virtually twenty-four hours surveillance of them,” the motion argued.

“Twitter has a good history” of protecting its users in court, said Ginger McCall, director of the Open Government Program at the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC). “But they shouldn’t have to. The user should be able to fight for themselves.”

Thursday’s motion referenced similar cases involving Google’s Gmail and Amazon.com, in which judges rejected the argument that users had no standing to challenge demands for information.

“Everything on the Internet is held by a third party,” said Susan Freiwald, a professor of cyber law and information privacy at the University of San Francisco School of Law, who was not involved in Thursday’s motion.

“If you were to say that the third party rule retains force on the Internet, then we would have no privacy online.”

(Reporting By Robin Respaut; editing by Jonathan Weber and Todd Eastham)

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