US Supreme Court rejects X Corp's surveillance disclosure challenge
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[January 09, 2024]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday rejected a request by Elon
Musk's X Corp to consider whether the social media company, formerly
called Twitter, can publicly disclose how often federal law enforcement
seeks information about users for national security investigations.
The justices declined to hear X's appeal of a lower court's ruling
holding that the FBI's restrictions on what the company could say
publicly about the investigations did not violate its free speech rights
under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.
X had said it was "critical" for the justices to take up the case to
establish clear standards for when and how tech companies can speak
about government demands for confidential information about their users
for surveillance.
"History demonstrates that the surveillance of electronic communications
is both a fertile ground for government abuse and a lightning-rod
political topic of intense concern to the public," X's lawyers wrote in
its petition to the Supreme Court.
Musk in a post on X called it "disappointing that the Supreme Court
declined to hear this matter."
The long-running lawsuit was filed in 2014, long before Musk acquired
Twitter in 2022, after former National Security Agency contractor Edward
Snowden leaked information in 2013 about the extent of U.S. spying and
surveillance efforts.
In response to the public outcry over the revelations from Snowden's
leaks, the U.S. government at the request of tech companies - including
Alphabet's Google, Microsoft, Twitter and Facebook-owner Meta Platforms
- agreed to relax restrictions on what they could reveal about data that
the government had sought in connection with national security probes.
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The new logo of Twitter is seen in this illustration taken, July 24,
2023. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo
The revised policy, announced in 2014, allowed companies to disclose
in broad ranges rather than in exact figures how often they received
of national security-related demands for information.
Congress in 2015 enacted a law allowing companies to disclose
limited information about how often they received so-called national
security letters and orders under the Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Act seeking user data. But they could still do so only
in broad ranges rather than exact figures. Depending on the type of
report they published, companies could disclose government demands
for data in increments of as little as 100 or as much as 1,000.
Twitter, as X was then known, in its lawsuit said it wanted to go
further and disclose the exact number of times in a prior six-month
period that the government served it with national-security orders
seeking information.
It had submitted a draft report for the FBI before suing that would
do just that, but the FBI concluded the information in the report
was classified and could not be publicly released.
A trial judge rejected Twitter's lawsuit, and a three-judge panel of
the San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld
that ruling in March 2023, saying the "government's restriction on
Twitter's speech is narrowly tailored in support of a compelling
government interest."
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston; Editing by Will Dunham, Alexia
Garamfalvi and Jonathan Oatis)
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