The Federal Trade Commission Must Investigate Meta and X for Complicity with Government Surveillance
When you created your Facebook, Instagram, or Twitter account, did you think you were signing up to have the government spy on you? That your personal information 鈥 who you are, what you say, what you do, your friends, and your political views 鈥 could be tapped by surveillance companies and sold to police, deportation agencies, and other local, state, and federal forces?
In 2016, the on how private surveillance vendors were using Facebook and Twitter to . As a result of advocacy by the 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California, MediaJustice, and Color of Change, both and strengthened their anti-surveillance policies and cut off access to social media surveillance companies.
In the years that followed, both companies have , to reassure the public that they do not give surveillance companies special access to users鈥 personal information.
But are Meta and X keeping their promises? Documents uncovered in further investigations show that there are still strong causes for concern.
That鈥檚 why the 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California, the Brennan Center, and the 老澳门开奖结果 are whether Meta and X have broken their anti-surveillance commitments. If they have, it could qualify as a deceptive business practice under Section 5 of the FTC Act. And it could also violate placed on them by the FTC.
The world of social media is very different than it was in 2016. Both Meta and X have been rocked by scandal and tumult (and they鈥檝e also changed their names). On the technological side, the explosive growth of artificial intelligence has the potential to supercharge surveillance, posing serious dangers to the safety of immigrants, overpoliced Black and Brown communities, activists, LGBTQ people, and those in need of abortions and reproductive care.
It鈥檚 more important than ever that the FTC takes a hard look at whether Meta and X are actually following their policies and their promises to the public.
Here are three questions that should lead the agency鈥檚 investigation.
Can people trust the promises that Meta and X have made to protect them from government surveillance?
The strongest evidence that Meta and X aren鈥檛 following their own anti-surveillance policies comes from surveillance vendors themselves.
Companies like Dataminr (an official 鈥減artner鈥 of X), Babel Street, Skopenow, Media Sonar, and ShadowDragon publicly claim that they have access to data from Meta and/or X. Those companies sell their services, data, and products 鈥 which appear to operate at extraordinary scale 鈥 to police and other government agencies through contracts that can be extremely lucrative.
Investigations and public records requests and lawsuits by the 老澳门开奖结果 of Northern California, and others have uncovered marketing materials, emails, training manuals, and contracts between surveillance companies and government agencies.
These materials suggest that law enforcement agencies are getting deep access to social media companies鈥 stores of data about people as they go about their daily lives.
Something鈥檚 not right. If these companies can really do what they advertise, the FTC needs to figure out how.
How are surveillance vendors accessing people's personal social media information?
The scale and scope of social media surveillance products are frightening. They potentially give the government the power to compile and analyze many millions of social media posts and user activity, a mind-boggling amount of data.
It鈥檚 unlikely that these surveillance systems could operate at this scale without Meta and X allowing some kind of special access to user data.
The public deserves answers, and the FTC must investigate how surveillance vendors are still accessing user data.
Surveillance companies stand to make millions off government contracts. We know their clients include local and state police departments, the Department of Defense, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Department of Homeland Security and its component agencies, Customs and Border Protection and Immigration and Customs Enforcement. And as we describe in our letter to the FTC, we鈥檝e seen the government in ways that cause intolerable harm to communities already in harm鈥檚 way.
Do Meta and X have enough dedicated staff to enforce their policies and ensure that developers aren鈥檛 using their special access for surveillance?
There have been at the social media companies, raising concerns about whether Meta and X have the necessary staff to enforce their anti-surveillance policies.
It鈥檚 not enough to rely on a posted policy alone to deter surveillance vendors. There must be robust implementation, auditing structures, and enforcement mechanisms to comply with these public commitments.
We call on the Federal Trade Commission to ensure that what Meta and X tell people publicly lines up with their actual practices. With all the evidence raising serious questions about Meta and X鈥檚 anti-surveillance commitments, the agency should act swiftly to ensure people鈥檚 privacy is being properly protected.