Three people, including a Dutchman Rop Gonggrijp, go in appeal against the decision of the American judge who Twitter must have their data to hand over to the U.s. government. They say damage.
In anticipation of the appeal, requests the three to the right to Twitter recommend on Twitter-details not yet to hand over to the government. The U.S. wants the data of Rop Gonggrijp, Jacob Appelbaum and Birgitta Jonsdottir, because of their possible involvement in the publication of the Collateral Murder video to Wikileaks.
The handing over of private information before the appeal takes place, according to the three for ‘irreparable damage’. While the impact for the U.s. government would be minimal if the data still does not get it, writes the Wall Street Journal. Had Gongrijp on his blog know that there are not many from his Twitter communication. The government will probably want to used ip addresses to get your hands on.
The three argued previously that the fourth amendment of the Bill of Rights was applicable, which provides protection against unreasonable searches and seizures by the government. Also, the government would first likely to have to make that there is a crime. The judge was not there, aantekenend that persons are not located on the privacy having to rely in use of services like Twitter.