Just when you thought it was safe to selfie you latest WalMart-looting or molotov-cocktail-throwing night out, think again. According to the ACLU, law enforcement officials implemented a far-reaching surveillance program to track protesters in both Ferguson and Baltimore during their recent uprisings and relied on special feeds of user data provided by three top social media companies: Twitter, Facebook and Instagram.
We
are pleased that after we reported our findings to the companies,
Instagram cut off Geofeedia’s access to public user posts, and Facebook
has cut its access to a topic-based feed of public user posts. Twitter
has also taken some recent steps to rein in Geofeedia though it has not
ended the data relationship.
Further steps are
required if these companies are to live up to their principles and
policies by protecting users of all backgrounds engaging in political
and social discourse.
...
We now know the following about these agreements:
Instagram had provided Geofeedia access to the Instagram API, a
stream of public Instagram user posts. This data feed included any
location data associated with the posts by users. Instagram terminated
this access on September 19, 2016.
Facebook had provided Geofeedia with access to a data feed called
the Topic Feed API, which is supposed to be a tool for media companies
and brand purposes, and which allowed Geofeedia to obtain a ranked feed
of public posts from Facebook that mention a specific topic, including
hashtags, events, or specific places. Facebook terminated this access on
September 19, 2016.
Twitter did not provide access to its “Firehose,” but has an
agreement, via a subsidiary, to provide Geofeedia with searchable access
to its database of public tweets. In February, Twitter added additional
contract terms to try to further safeguard against surveillance. But
our records show that as recently as July 11th,
Geofeedia was still touting its product as a tool to monitor protests.
After learning of this, Twitter sent Geofeedia a cease and desist
letter.
Because Geofeedia obtained this access to Twitter, Facebook and
Instagram as a developer, it could access a flow of data that would
otherwise require an individual to “scrape” user data off of the
services in an automated fashion that is prohibited by the terms of
service (here and here). With this special access, Geofeedia could quickly access public user content and make it available to the 500 law enforcement and public safety clients claimed by the company.
As Engadget summarizes,
law enforcement's ability to monitor the online activities of
protesters could have a chilling effect on First Amendment rights, the post asserts.
"These
platforms need to be doing more to protect the free speech rights of
activists of color and stop facilitating their surveillance by police,"
Nicole Ozer, technology and civil liberties policy director for the ACLU
of California, told the Washington Post.
"The ACLU shouldn't have to tell Facebook or Twitter what their own
developers are doing. The companies need to enact strong public policies
and robust auditing procedures to ensure their platforms aren't being
used for discriminatory surveillance."