Alt Immigration
The government is demanding what?
Twitter filed a lawsuit Thursday against the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, asking the court to prevent the department from taking steps to unmask the user behind an account critical of the Trump administration.
The tech company said that allowing DHS access to that information would produce a “grave chilling effect on the speech of that account,” as well as other accounts critical of the U.S. government. The case sets up a potential showdown over free speech between Silicon Valley and Washington.
According to Twitter’s court filings, Homeland Security is “unlawfully abusing a limited-purpose investigatory tool” to find out who is behind the @ALT_USCIS account. Its Twitter feed has publicly criticized the administration’s immigration policies, particularly the actions of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) division of Homeland Security.
Of course I immediately sprinted off to Twitter and followed @ALT_USCIS.
for the new incoming audience, this is what we tweet about! https://t.co/D4ZRVsioiz
— ALT-immigration (@ALT_uscis) April 6, 2017
2/ for the new incoming audience, this is what we tweet about! https://t.co/399TYCUuiC
— ALT-immigration (@ALT_uscis) April 6, 2017
3/for the new incoming audience, this is what we tweet about! https://t.co/gIf7P2sP1l
— ALT-immigration (@ALT_uscis) April 6, 2017
4/ and when we were right back in Feb 9th about the 800 mile being open. https://t.co/ClHYGtFtGX
— ALT-immigration (@ALT_uscis) April 6, 2017
5/for the new incoming audience, this is what we tweet about! https://t.co/PPgd7P08nz
— ALT-immigration (@ALT_uscis) April 6, 2017
Homeland Security refused to answer the Washington Post’s questions.
In the filing, Twitter said that DHS officials delivered an administrative summons to the social networking site on March 14, via a Customs and Border Protection agent, demanding that the company provide records that would “unmask or likely lead to the unmasking” of the person or people behind the account.
Twitter opposes the order on two main points. First, it maintains that the CBP does not have jurisdiction to demand such information, which includes “names, account login, phone numbers, mailing addresses, and I.P. addresses,” associated with the account.
But its primary objection, the company said, is that allowing the government to unmask Twitter critics is a violation of the U.S. Constitution’s First Amendment right to free speech. Twitter has long defended its users’ rights to free expression — a position it has held for years, notably during the widespread “Arab Spring” protests in 2011. That right, the company said, is particularly important when discussing political speech.
It’s a good deal less important, I would argue, when bullying people. One Twitter account is not in a position to bully the DHS.
The American Civil Liberties Union, which is representing the user in this case, also said that it’s concerned the order is an attempt to infringe on free speech. “To unmask an anonymous speaker online, the government must have a strong justification. But in this case the government has given no reason at all, leading to concerns that it is simply trying to stifle dissent,” said ACLU attorney Nathan Freed Wessler in a statement.
The @Alt_USCIS account is one of many “alternative government” accounts that have been popping up since President Trump’s election. Accounts apparently run by employees (or former employees) of the National Park Service, National Weather Service, Labor Department and other agencies have all appeared to question the Trump administration’s policies and fact-check its assertions on a variety of topics.
Twitter said it also feared that the government wants to punish the person or people responsible for the account. The summons, the company said, “may reflect the very sort of official retaliation that can result from speech that criticizes government officials and agencies.”
Ya think?
I hope Twitter prevails on this one.
Standard dictator type policies – crack down on critics, freeze all negative speech. Send a message to others that will chill their criticism.
This administration has the thinnest skin of any president at least in my lifetime. He can’t stand to be criticized.
A very nice and funny colleague of mine had a sign in his office: “Any just criticism not welcome here”. That was more of a joke then than it is in this case.