Twitter plans crackdown on developers & organizations exploiting data for surveillance

Posted:
in General Discussion
Over the next several months, Twitter will embark on a crackdown on developers building surveillance tools to track protesters and activists, the company said this week in announcement.




Using Twitter's public APIs and Gnip enterprise data for surveillance is already banned under official terms, and can lead to suspensions or outright termination of access to the material, the company noted. To address abuse cases, it's planning "expanded enforcement and compliance efforts," among them dedicating more resources to investigating and acting on complaints.

Twitter has often been used by dissidents, some examples being uprisings in Egypt, Iran, Tunisia, and Ukraine, as well as more persistent movements like anti-corporate protests or Black Lives Matter. As the social network has expanded though, various firms have created tools that can be used to monitor people -- including trends and locations -- and supply that data to law enforcement and spy agencies, chilling the ability to speak out.

In October Twitter suspended one such firm, Geofeedia, from access to its commercial data, after the American Civil Liberties Union called attention to police using the material to monitor protesters against police violence in Baltimore and Ferguson. Earlier in 2016, it tried to limit U.S. spy agencies' data access through a firm called Dataminr.

Twitter has struggled to find its footing in the past year, thanks to high-profile departures and investor concerns about its ability to grow and turn a profit. However, on Tuesday night, the company accidentally temporarily suspended the account of its own CEO, Jack Dorsey.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 4
    Yeah, good luck with that. That genii is out of the bottle.
    watto_cobra
  • Reply 2 of 4
    Good.
  • Reply 3 of 4
    I don't have any problem with the data mining. People may not remember, but the 9/11 hijackers didn't really do anything "illegal" or obvious enough for a govt. wire tap aside from overstaying visas. Do we just wait for something to happen and then go berserk with Patriot Act on everyone? All this aside, any govt. agency could probably pose as some ad agency and get all the same data from twtr.
  • Reply 4 of 4
    It's not the tools, it's the subhuman tendencies in the head that directs the hands of the non-person holding the tools that is the source of the problem, and that applies equally to activists, government agencies, commercial "sellswords" (Game of Thrones reference thrown in there!) et al.

    In short, only an internal (dare I use the term "spiritual"?) revolution in our all-round subhuman societies will "bell the cat" and usher in a truly New World Order to quell the ever-ascending chaos of current times...
    edited November 2016 spacerays
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