Outted by Twitter

internet attorney twitter identity privacy

Talk with your Internet attorney about Twitter privacy

This is significant to your Internet attorney and your business too. Twitter has just revealed the identity of a Twitter user, including his personal contact information.

Here’s what happened…

A local British government sued in California. Twitter caved and gave out the Tweeter’s name and contact information. Twitter  “passed the name, email address and telephone number of a south Tyneside councillor accused of libelling the local authority via a series of anonymous Twitter accounts.” – Twitter unmasks anonymous British user in landmark legal battle, UK Guardian (May 29, 2011)

Now the government is going after him for libel because of the content of his tweets.

If the Tweeter had wanted to protect his identity, he would have had to fly from the U.K. to California, hire a U.S. Internet attorney, and try to convince the court his information should not be released.

If you’ve been defamed in Tweets, this precedent is something to consider. It’s a lot of leverage because Twitter will apparently fold like a cheap suit instead of protecting user identities.

If you are posting content on Twitter under the impression your identity and contact info will be protected, don’t count on it. When in doubt, talk with your Internet attorney before posting something that could land you in legal hot water.

Best wishes,

-Mike the Internet attorney

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Good privacy law news for website owners

internet lawyer privacy

Talk with your Internet lawyer about cookies and privacy

Here’s something your Internet lawyer probably doesn’t see every day. A California federal judge threw out of court a class-action privacy lawsuit filed against an ad network.

Why was the case tossed?

The judge couldn’t see how the plaintiffs could show they were harmed by the Adobe Flash tracking cookies installed on their computers.

To be sure, these flash cookies are harder to stop and remove than traditional tracking cookies. But that doesn’t mean one can play litigation lotto by filing a lawsuit about it without having actually been damaged. (If you think you’ve been injured, of course, talk it over with an Internet lawyer who litigates.)

The lawyer who filed the case is threatening to re-file it. In most of these class action shakedowns, the law firm makes a bundle and the “injured” parties get something cheesy like a coupon for their next purchase of one of the defendant’s products.

But you have to wonder who really won when this case got tossed? The defendant had to pay a large law firm big moolah to represent it in court.

Wouldn’t it have been better for everyone (except the lawyers) if the use of cookies of any type was clearly disclosed to website visitors so they’d be less likely to sue in the first place?

Just because something’s legal to do doesn’t make it right…nor is it a good business decision to play “hide the tracking cookie” either.

To your online success!

-Mike the Internet Lawyer

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