
Facebook featured on a phone on June 28, 2017.
Facebook (fb, -1.69%)
is challenging a gag order from a U.S. court that is preventing the
company from talking about three government search warrants that it said
pose a threat to free dom of speech , according to court documents.
Facebook
said it wants to notify three us ers about the search warrants
seeking their communications and information and also give those us ers
an opportunity to object to the warrants, according to a filing in a
Washington, D.C., appeals court seen by Reuters.
"We
believe there are important First Amendment concerns with this case,
including the government's ref us al to let us notify three people of
broad requests for their account information in connection with public
events," Facebook said in a statement on Monday.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution guarantees certain rights including free dom of speech .
William Miller, a spokesman for U.S. prosecutors, declined to comment.
Facebook
decided to challenge the gag order around the three warrants beca
us e free speech was at stake and beca us e the events underlying the
government's investigation were generally known to the public already,
Facebook said in the undated court document.
The
precise nature of the government's investigation is not known. One
document in the case said the timing of proceedings coincides with
charges against people who protested President Donald Trump's
inauguration in January.
More
than 200 people were arrested in Washington the day Trump was sworn in.
Masked activists threw rocks at police, and multiple vehicles were set
on fire.
Tech
firms comply with tho us ands of requests for us er data annually made
by governments around the world, but in extraordinary circumstances,
companies such as Microsoft (msft, -1.10%) and Twitter (twtr, -1.29%) have challenged government secrecy order s.
Facebook
recently fought a secrecy order related to a disability fraud
investigation, losing in April in New York state's highest court.
Companies
and privacy advocates argue that gag order s rely on outdated laws
and are applied too often, sometimes indefinitely, to bar them from
notifying c us tomers about government requests for their private online
data. Facebook says about half of U.S. requests are accompanied by a
non-disclosure order prohibiting it from notifying affected us ers.
In
April, a local judge in Washington denied Facebook 's request to
remove the gag order there, according to the document. Facebook is
appealing and has preserved the relevant records pending the outcome,
the document said.
"The
government can only insulate its actions from public scrutiny in this
way in the rarest circumstances, which likely do not apply here," said
Andrew Crocker, a staff attorney at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
nonprofit group that advocates for digital rights.
Facebook
is getting support in court papers from several organizations
including the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the American Civil
Liberties Union, as well as eight tech companies such as Microsoft and Apple Inc.
The
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, which is the highest court in
Washington for local matters, is scheduled to hear the case in
September, according to an order obtained by BuzzFeed News, which
first reported Facebook 's challenge to the gag order on Monday.
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