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Invasions of Privacy In The Cyber Sphere: Who’s Watching And What They Know About You

Google, Facebook, Twitter, Foursquare—millions of Americans, including myself, depend on these cyber sites as their gateway to information and communication in the outside world.  What we may not realize, or choose to ignore for convenience’s sake, is that this gateway lies on a two-way street. The information that we seek using websites such as Google and what we communicate on Facebook and Twitter provide companies with vital data to better market their products to us.  This use of information is referred to as “data mining. ”

An example of data mining can be seen in the advertisements that pop up on the side of your Facebook home page.  Such ads are often relevant to the information posted on your “Profile” page, such as advertisements promoting products from your college alma mater. 

At the outset, data mining seems like a win-win situation for both the consumer and the seller—the consumer is marketed with a product in which they are seemingly interested and the company has utilized its advertising budget in an informed, cost-effective manner.  At the same time, however, the threat of an invasion of privacy is real and has the attention of members of Congress and federal officials to create legislation regulating the way in which, and the extent to which, our personal information is shared with third parties. 

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Keeping It Short And Tweet

Your employee is being paid millions of dollars each year to perform his job. Right in the middle of today’s tasks, as he is about to receive instruction from his supervisor, your employee takes out his cell phone and posts a “tweet” on his feelings about his performance to all of his friends who have signed up to follow his twitter board. Would you have a problem with that?

At least two employers did. News surfaced last week that Eric Mangini, head coach of the NFL’s Cleveland Browns, has threatened to fine players for tweeting about events at training camp, and particularly during team meetings. This on the heels of the well-publicized action taken last year by the NBA’s Milwaukee Bucks. In that case, Bucks forward Charlie Villanueva apparently posted a message to his Twitter feed from his cell phone when he went into the locker room at halftime of a basketball game against the Boston Celtics. According to reports, the tweet that was posted from Villanueva’s “CV31” screen name read: “In da locker room, snuck to post my twitt. We’re playing the Celtics, tie ball game at da half. Coach wants more toughness. I gotta step up.”

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Old Claims Still Exist in New Social Media Context

One of the difficult things to predict with regard to the use of social media in the employment setting continues to be the extent to which traditional legal claims apply equally to new social media outlets.   We continue to advise employers that it is imperative to ensure that care is also taken to create policies and train employees on the use of social media in and out of the office setting, and not to let the informality and ease of the Internet lull employers into a false sense of security.   On July 22, 2010, a New York Supreme Court Judge applied the tort of defamation to statements on Facebook in a case that offers an important message to employers.

The case of Finkel v. Dauber (New York Supreme Court, Nassau County) centered on statements posted by a Facebook group known as “90 Cents Short of a Dollar.” Plaintiff alleged that she was defamed by the group’s postings that stated “unbeknownst to many, [plaintiff] acquired AIDS while on a cruise to Africa” and then “persisted to screw a baboon which caused the epidemic to spread.”   The postings further defamed plaintiff, she alleged, by stating “[w]hile in Africa she was seen fucking a horse.”   And other intelligent banter.

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Divorce: Isn’t There An App For That?

“A lawyer is never entirely comfortable with a friendly divorce, anymore than a good mortician wants to finish his job and then have the patient sit up on the table.”  Jean Kerr

A new company out of Dallas, DivorceApps.com, is selling applications aimed at helping people navigate the legal waters of divorce. A Texas family lawyer, Michelle May O’Neil, started the company in March of this year. Two apps currently are for sale on iphones at a cost of $9.99 USD.  Applications that are currently available online are described as follows:

(1) Cost and Prep Application: A system that 1) tracks the information that will be required either by legal counsel or the other side of the case and 2) helps the user track the costs of divorce. For example, the “Divorce Cost” portion of the application provides a scroll down list of categories that enables the user to gain a better understanding of the costs of divorce. The “Scroll Down” component of the application allows the user to scroll through the categories of information to determine the documents and information that will be applicable to their case.

(2) Estate Divider Application: The “Estate Divider” is a system that purports to allow a user to work through the overall division of their Estate. The user can:

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It’s All About Meme, Dancing Babies, Getting Rickrolled, “The Ring” and Reasons Why You Perhaps Shouldn’t Post that Hilarious Video of Your Drunken College Buddy on YouTube

I was recently introduced to a great new Scrabble word: “meme”. According to wikipedia, my source for all things “e-”, a meme, in reference to the Internet, is ‘the propagation of a digital file or hyperlink’ that contains content consisting of a saying or joke, a rumor, an altered or original image, a complete website, a video clip or animation, or an offbeat news story, among many other possibilities. In other words, an Internet meme is an inside joke that is shared between a large number of Internet users.

Internet memes have a tendency to evolve and spread extremely swiftly, sometimes going in and out of popularity in just days. They are spread organically, voluntarily, and peer to peer, rather than by compulsion, predetermined path, or completely automated means. The term ‘meme’ can refer to the content that spreads from user to user, the idea behind the content, or the phenomenon of its spread.

Ally McBeal fans may now appreciate the reference to the dancing ‘oogachucka’  baby. In an effort to be a bit more up-to-date in my meme references, I’ve embedded some of them, below.  If you’re seeing them for the first time, you may experience the ‘lightbulb effect’ – that is, you’ll actually get the joke behind certain late night comedy skits that just didn’t seem all that funny.

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Pulling the Plug on Cyberbullies: Should Schools be Responsible for Sticks and Stones Thrown in Cyberspace?

His name is Ghyslain Raza, but you may know of him as “Star Wars Kid”, a portly 15-year-old student at a Quebec private high school who had filmed himself wielding a mock light saber, pretending to be a Star Wars character in combat. The two-minute video was supposed to be private, but he left it lying around at his school where three students, who did not know the teenager, came across the video, posted it on the Internet on April 14, 2003, adding a message inviting people to make insulting remarks about the clip.

Unfortunately for him, it wasn’t just his friends who found the footage so amusing. The video went ‘viral’. One Web log that posted the video was allegedly downloaded 1.1 million times, and by October 2004 one Internet site dedicated to the video had recorded 76 million visits. According to UK marketing firm The Viral Factory, it became the most downloaded video of 2006. So mortified was the teenager that he dropped out of school and finished the semester at a psychiatric ward. According to the student, “It was simply unbearable, totally. It was impossible to attend class.”  More than 35 other revised versions of the video clip, created by other people, have found their way to the Internet, with additional sound and visual effects.

This is an extreme but far from unique example of the devastation wrought by cyber-bullying, the term given to internet conduct in which students harass other students by e-mail and on the internet. Given the potentially devastating consequences of cyberbullying, should schools have the power to discipline their students engaging in this form of harmful conduct?

A major issue confronting school boards is that cyberbullying usually does not take place at school, although its effects can later reverberate among students during school hours. Students may post offensive material from home, or other times outside of school hours, but the targets are fellow classmates. Is it appropriate for a school board to discipline a student for posting such material simply because the postings are being accessed by other students at school or target other students?  At the same time, with power comes responsibility – if school boards have the power to discipline students for their behavior outside of school, are schools then to be mandated with the responsibility to essentially monitor and censor the world-wide web? Just how far should a school board’s jurisdiction extend regarding inappropriate off-school student e-conduct?

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The Proof is in the Posting: How Social Media is Changing the Law

A man and a lion were arguing about who was best, each one seeking evidence in support of his claim. They came to a tombstone on which a man was shown in the act of strangling a lion, and the man offered this picture as evidence. The lion replied, “It was a man who painted this; if a lion had painted it, you would instead see a lion strangling a man. But let’s look at some real evidence instead.” The lion then brought the man to the amphitheater and showed him so he could see with his own eyes just how a lion strangles a man. The lion then concluded, “A pretty picture is not proof: Facts are the only real evidence!”

The moral of the story has indeed changed since the times of Aesop, at least in today’s courtroom. Social networking websites such as Facebook, MySpace, and Twitter invite attorneys and their clients into a lion’s den of pictures and postings, creating a haven for evidentiary consequences that can be unexpected obstacles if attorneys are unprepared to counter them.

INTRODUCTION

With claims such as “Facebook is a great place to keep in touch with friends,” “Using Twitter is going to change the way you [stay] in touch,” and “MySpace lets you meet your friends’ friends,” social networking websites are, admittedly, enticing. This article surveys recent evidentiary issues involving these sites across multiple practice areas and counsels how to avoid some of the adverse rulings discussed herein.

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Does the Internet Create Unfair Jury Trials?

Jurors are not supposed to look at media coverage of the case during a trial since their verdicts are supposed to based on the evidence presented in a trial, rather than media reports. But can they really resist taking a sneak peek on the Internet?

In February of 2010, the U.K.’s Ministry of Justice released a very interesting report, titled “Are Juries Fair?“, by Professor Cheryl Thomas.  Among other things, the study examined jurors’ use of the Internet to look up information about their cases in both long, high profile cases and standard cases lasting less than two weeks, with little media coverage. The report found:

  • All jurors who looked for information about their case during the trial looked for it on the Internet, as opposed to television, newspapers or some other source. (Well, okay, so this one wasn’t exactly a big surprise…).
  • More jurors said they “saw” information on the Internet than admitted to “looking for it” on the Internet. Since they were doing something that a  judge should have told them that they were not supposed to do, this may explain why jurors were more likely to say the saw reports on the Internet than said they looked for it. (See? Lawyers aren’t the only people in the courtroom who resort to semantics….). But just what are the figures?

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But I’m Innocent, I Swear! This Website Proves It!

Who would have thought a comment as innocent as “Just walked into work at Cozen O’Connor-Toronto…so much work to get done” could potentially cause you so much trouble? 

I came across an article this weekend by Tracy Staedter, titled “I’m Not Home: Please Rob Me”. Ready to become paranoid?  Read the article – it’s short and to the point.  Ever send out Evites?  How about prior tweets, MySpace posts, etc. inviting people to your place and including an address?   Bingo!  Better pack up and move quick! 

The website causing havoc is www.PleaseRobMe.com.  Check it out…make sure you aren’t on the site…then check again after every time you tweet, post, etc.  Do you have the time to constantly check?  Probably not.  Should you?  Probably.  It may make you paranoid, but then again, shouldn’t you be?  But should the creators of the website be blamed – legally, morally, ethically?  Should they be held accountable for what you put out into the public realm?  Can you sue for violation of your privacy rights?  Do you really have an expectation of privacy in any of those posts?  In an age where MySpace, Friendster and other social networking sites regularly have their records subpoenaed, why should anyone think that anything they post will be “private”?  What piqued my curiosity even more was how this website could apply in the criminal or tort law application.  Can this website be used to substantiate or corroborate an accused’s alibi – “Your Honor, look!  I have proof that I wasn’t in the city when the crime occurred…I tweeted that I would be in Los Angeles!”  Look, my knowledge of Canadian (or U.S., for that matter) Criminal Law/Procedure does not extend further than the 800 or so pages of textbooks I read while in law school.  But surely this website can be put to more use than just what the creators intended.  So long as a proper foundation is laid, and the purported evidence is relevant, it may be admitted, right?  Something to definitely consider as a defense attorney. 

The creators of the website claim the site is supposed to help us…to open our eyes to the evil out in the world.  Call me crazy, but perhaps a simple email addressed to me would have been more appreciated…though it leaves one wondering if such a logical course of action would have been as effective.

Does The World Need A U.N. Sponsored Cyber Peace Treaty? One Diplomat Emphatically Says Yes… As the U.S. Gears Up For A Cyberwar

As the cyber war of words heats up between the U.S. and China, the rest of the world is taking notice….and proposing action.

Most recently, the head of the United Nations’ communication and technology agency, Secretary General Hamadoun Toure of the International Telecommunications Union, proposed a treaty whereby member countries agree not to precipitate a cyber attack against other member countries. “The framework would look like a peace treaty before a war,” he is reported to have said.

Secretary Toure’s proposal follows a series of concerns expressed at last month’s World Economic Forum in Davos-Klosters, Switzerland, including a harsh warning that cyber attacks could amount to a declaration of war. According to Secretary Toure, “[a] cyber war would be worse than a tsunami – a catastrophe.” Because of the potential devastating consequences of a cyber war, the Secretary strongly recommended that countries agree not to harbor cyber criminals and “commit themselves not to attack another.” Of course, nothing is quite as simple as that. For example, John Negroponte, the former director of U.S. intelligence, cautioned that intelligence agencies would “express reservations” about such a treaty. Given the breadth and scope of China’s, Russia’s and other countries’ intelligence operations and their reported limits on information disclosures, Mr. Negroponte’s remarks likely would be echoed by other nations.

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