We filed a friend-of-the-court brief today in New York state court in support of Twitter鈥檚 efforts to protect the constitutional rights of one of its users. As we posted earlier this month, Twitter took a great step to defend its users鈥 rights by filing a motion to quash a subpoena that the District Attorney鈥檚 Office in Manhattan issued in connection with the prosecution of an Occupy Wall Street protester.
This is an important case. Law enforcement officials around the country are becoming increasingly aggressive in their attempts to obtain information about what people are doing and saying on the Internet, and we need to make sure that the proper legal standards are put in place to handle these government requests. We shouldn鈥檛 have to worry that the government will be able to get access to everything we do and say on the Internet, whenever they want that information. The information being requested in this particular subpoena would provide the government with a wealth of knowledge about the user鈥檚 communications and geographic locations for a three-and-a-half month period. The request covers all of the user鈥檚 tweets (no longer available on Twitter), as well as his subscriber information, which includes his personal email address, the IP addresses he used to access Twitter, and the date, time, and duration of each of his Twitter sessions, linked to the content of his tweets.
As we argue in our brief (which was joined by the New York Civil Liberties Union, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Public Citizen), the government shouldn鈥檛 be able to get this sensitive and constitutionally protected information without a warrant and without first satisfying First Amendment scrutiny. Because the D.A. didn鈥檛 do that here鈥攊t just issued a simple subpoena, claiming that the information was 鈥渞elevant鈥 to its pending prosecution of the Twitter user鈥攊t shouldn鈥檛 be permitted to obtain all of this information.
What makes this case so important鈥攁nd unique鈥攊s that the court previously ruled that the individual Twitter user did not have legal standing to challenge the D.A.鈥檚 subpoena for his information鈥攊.e., that he didn鈥檛 even have the right to go to court to try to protect his constitutional rights鈥攐n the ground that the demand for records was issued to Twitter, not to him, for Twitter鈥檚 records, not for his records.
That can鈥檛 be right. As we point out in our brief, the Supreme Court and courts around the country have repeatedly made clear that individuals whose constitutional rights are implicated by government requests for information to third parties (such as Twitter) do have standing to challenge those third-party requests. That is because the third parties receiving these government requests don鈥檛 have sufficient incentives to challenge the requests.
Twitter should continue to be applauded for stepping in and challenging this particular subpoena, but the reality is that Twitter and other Internet companies will not and cannot challenge every one of these requests for information about one of their millions of users. That is why it is so important that individuals be allowed to go to court to protect their own rights.
This isn鈥檛 the first time we鈥檝e seen this kind of government subpoena, and, unfortunately, it won鈥檛 be the last time. But we鈥檙e hopeful that this case will serve as a positive precedent and help ensure that the government cannot obtain information about individuals鈥 Internet communications and their movements over time without first obtaining a warrant and complying with the First Amendment. After all, that鈥檚 what the Constitution requires.