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Facebook Should be Allowed to Protect User Privacy

In an amicus brief accepted by the New York State Court of Appeals, the Brennan Center argued that Facebook should be allowed to protect the privacy of its users by challenging the constitutionality of “bulk” warrants for personal data.

January 13, 2017

Facebook should be allowed to protect the privacy of its users by challenging the constitutionality of “bulk” warrants for personal data, argued the Brennan Center for Justice in an amicus brief accepted by the New York State Court of Appeals yesterday. Facebook is challenging, on behalf of its customers, a ruling that allowed the New York County District Attorney’s Office to seize, search, and retain the private account information of hundreds of users, the vast majority of whom were not ultimately prosecuted or even notified of the privacy invasion.

 “Records hosted by third-party communications providers, such as Facebook, contain vast amounts of personal information and deserve the same constitutional protections afforded to one’s private papers,” said Michael Price, counsel in the Brennan Center’s Liberty and National Security Program and one of the authors of the brief. “Any suggestion that online communications are less deserving of Fourth Amendment guarantees is off the mark and corrosive of privacy rights, freedom of speech, and freedom of association.”

The Brennan Center’s brief emphasizes three main points: (1) user data stored with internet service providers like Facebook requires vigorous Fourth Amendment protections; (2) the Fourth Amendment’s “particularity requirement” takes on special importance in the digital context; and (3) copying of electronic data is a seizure under the Fourth Amendment. The Brennan Center believes that upholding these principles is essential to protecting privacy in the digital age.

Read the full amicus brief, written in conjunction with O’Melveny & Myers LLP, and filed on behalf of Facebook alongside co-amici the Electronic Frontier Foundation, Access Now, and the Technology Freedom Institute.

Read more at the Brennan Center’s case page.

For more information or to schedule an interview, contact Naren Daniel at (646) 292–8381 or naren.daniel@nyu.edu.