Court makes it official: You have no privacy online
Online services like Twitter and Facebook spend a lot of time on their privacy policies, and Facebook in particular has spent the past couple of years tweaking its settings, trying to find a balance between convincing users to share information and allowing them to keep some private. But a recent U.S. court decision involving the Twitter accounts of several WikiLeaks supporters shows when push comes to shove, users of social networks and most online services have virtually no expectation of privacy whatsoever — at least, not if the entity trying to get access to their personal information happens to be the U.S. Justice Department.
The case in question involves the Justice Department’s repeated attempts to get personal account data from three WikiLeaks supporters, in order to bolster its espionage case against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for the release of diplomatic cables last year that were stolen (allegedly) by Army intelligence agent and whistleblower Bradley Manning. The three who were targeted are Icelandic MP Birgitta Jonsdottir — an early supporter of WikiLeaks who helped produce the “Collateral Murder” video that showed a U.S. military attack on civilians in Iraq — as well as computer-security expert Jacob Appelbaum and Dutch hacker Rop Gonggrijp.
Court makes it official: You have no privacy online