Facebook Is a Snitch
Social media accounts are windows into your activities, and the cops are watching.

This shouldn't be a revelation, but posting the details of your life online is not an effective way to keep secrets. Among those trawling for information are government agents who find social media an easy and low-cost means of gathering intelligence, often with the cooperation of both the platforms and their targets. Since the information is easily gathered, cops and their private-sector contractors snoop on us not just to investigate crimes but also while fishing for anything of interest. Worse, instead of curbing such abuses, many politicians want more.
"Social media has become a significant source of information for U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies," the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law noted in a report released last week. "The Department of Homeland Security, the FBI, and the State Department are among the many federal agencies that routinely monitor social platforms, for purposes ranging from conducting investigations to identifying threats to screening travelers and immigrants."
The problem of government monitoring of social media isn't new. In 2019, the American Civil Liberties Union sued the feds in an effort to force disclosure of social-media monitoring capabilities. Last September, U.S. District Judge Edward Chen finally ordered Customs and Border Protection to reveal its surveillance rules. But we found out soon thereafter that the agency routinely runs the names of people of interest, including journalists and activists, through databases, and checks them against information scraped from social media by private companies.
Private contractors actually play a big role in social-media surveillance. For years, the FBI used Dataminr, "a third-party service that can alert agents and analysts to important social media posts about breaking news, as well as when, where and how often key words and phrases appear in online posts," according to the Washington Post.
The FBI switched in 2019 to ZeroFox, which offers a similar service. Some FBI agents blamed their inability to anticipate the January 6 riot at the Capitol on the changeover, saying the transition caused them to miss posts and key-word searches that could have served as red flags of events to come. That's a stretch, though, since even government officials admit the difficulty inherent in parsing serious intent to commit illegal acts from jokes, memes, and ill-tempered rants.
"[A]ctual intent to carry out violence can be difficult to discern from the angry, hyperbolic—and constitutionally protected—speech and information commonly found on social media and other online platforms," Melissa Smislova, former head of Intelligence and Analysis for the Department of Homeland Security, told the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs last March.
That challenge is emphasized by the Brennan Center, which points out that "[s]ocial media conversations are difficult to interpret because they are often highly context-specific and can be riddled with slang, jokes, memes, sarcasm, and references to popular culture; heated rhetoric is also common."
Heated rhetoric, in particular, is easy to deliberately misinterpret when law enforcement agents are under pressure to find somebody on whom to hang a crime or are biased against a target. The Brennan Center focuses on the risks that mining social media poses "for the Black, Latino, and Muslim communities that are historically targeted by law enforcement and intelligence efforts" and there's no doubt that agents motivated by racial, ethnic, and religious animus can have a field day spinning off-the-cuff posts and tweets. But the fractured state of modern America makes it obvious that political bias is also a danger when law enforcement goes on the hunt for participants in protests gone wrong or seeks damning details about critics of whichever faction is currently in power.
Often, agents don't have to do their own heavy lifting beyond asking companies for data on their users. According to Vox's Recode, when the FBI looked into the movements of suspected participants in the January 6 riot, telecoms volunteered the locations of cellphones, Facebook offered up selfies posted inside the Capitol, and Google provided precise location data.
"Rather than revealing the breadth of the FBI's domestic surveillance capabilities, the majority of cases show the power of the tech industry to collect and collate vast amounts of data on its users—and their obligation to share that data with law enforcement when asked," Vox's Sara Morrison wrote.
Over the past year, law enforcement has come under pressure to engage in even more monitoring of social media because of its failure to anticipate the January 6 riot.
"You know, I think that, in part, is an intelligence failure that is the failure to see all the evidence that was out there to be seen of the propensity for violence that day, a lot of it on social media," House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) commented last week. "Now there are answers for why the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security failed to see it as clearly as they should have and we're looking into that."
Many critics of alleged law enforcement intelligence failures concede that the FBI and its sister agencies have a horrendous history of abusive surveillance of minorities, anti-war activists, and peaceful political radicals. They'd better; the abuses are well-documented.
"[T]he FBI … has placed more emphasis on domestic dissent than on organized crime and, according to some, let its efforts against foreign spies suffer because of the amount of time spent checking up on American protest groups," as the U.S. Senate's Church Committee noted in 1976.
But their takeaway seems to be that since the feds wrongly put some groups under the microscope in the past, it should extend its surveillance efforts more widely in the future. Instead of curbing abusive surveillance, their goal is to make sure that previously excluded groups get a taste. That might be fairer, by some twisted understanding of the word, but it's also incredibly dangerous.
"Government monitoring of social media can work to people's detriment in at least four ways," cautions the Brennan Center report. "(1) wrongly implicating an individual or group in criminal behavior based on their activity on social media; (2) misinterpreting the meaning of social media activity, sometimes with severe consequences; (3) suppressing people's willingness to talk or connect openly online; and (4) invading individuals' privacy."
But monitoring social media is so easily and casually done that it's difficult to see the practice being effectively curbed. Until somebody figures out a good way to rein-in government snoopiness, it might be better to avoid taking selfies at protests. And give some extra thought to how the things you post online might be interpreted by officials who have it in for you.
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How many articles have you read where the cops use social media as evidence? Happens all the time. Look at that picture of dude showing off his gun. The same gun he used in the crime. People are fucking stupid.
What shocked me was the soi-disant Libertarian Defense Caucus installing itself on Faecebook.
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Yup. The problem is not Facebook is sharing your information, the problem is that you are sharing your information on Facebook. You might as well be posting it on a giant billboard across from the police station.
"The problem is not Facebook is sharing your information, the problem is that you are sharing your information on Facebook."
This, so much. I do have FB and Instagram accounts, but I almost never post anything personal there.
I remember a time in human history where photos were actually kept in those photo books. Those came into play during holiday gatherings - the aunt would bring one out, we would all see cute beach photos or baby pictures. It's a nice and intimate moment, and free from gazillion people ogling it, commenting on it, and trying to sell ads on it.
Don’t use your real last name. In person or online. Condoms break.
One thing I've noticed about law enforcement: they're nothing if not persistent and creative. If someone decides to not use social media at all due to privacy concerns, the cops will undoubtedly label that as "suspicious" i.e. "what are you trying to hide? Probable Cause!"
". Among those trawling for information are government agents who find social media an easy and low-cost means of gathering intelligence, "
.Theyre utterly incompetent to find the Bad Guy unless BG posts the Bad Deed online.
Donut Shop, smart phone, F-book- instant Cop.
The four that got killed in Starbucks in Seattle when on duty with their heads up their asses example that.
Not having social media accounts gives you an extra 3 hours a day for actually living.
^ This. Walk. Hike. Lift heavy shit. Cook your own meals. Fix your vehicle yourself. Get more sleep. Learn a new skill. Nobody will say on their deathbed, “I wish I had spent more time on Facebook.”
"... or the Reason comment section."
I know, I know, heal thyself....
LOL!
True!
ouch.
With all the nutjobs online a person needs to remain anonymous.
Meanwhile yet another Herman Cain/Darwin Award recipient:
Kelly Canon, longtime Arlington Republican, dies after hospitalization with COVID, pneumonia
KERA | By Kailey Broussard
Published January 11, 2022 at 6:17 PM CST
https://www.keranews.org/news/2022-01-11/prominent-arlington-republican-dies-after-hospitalization-with-covid-pneumonia
Note: I am OPPOSED to all federal/state vaccine mandates.
Stupidity suicide should be encouraged.
All I ask is you stay consistent with obesity deaths, drug and alcohol deaths, reckless driving and anything else a choice could possibly alter and I'll value your point but disagree with it.
How about this one:
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2722829/Jobless-man-50-died-sex-toy-got-stuck-body-embarrassed-doctor.html
Pneumonia is a real killer.
https://news.yahoo.com/head-european-parliament-dies-battling-175848103.html
Dr Fauci says people who die WITH covid are a thing now. She had pneumonia.
If everyone merely wrote to their members of Congress and state legislators saying we “oppose warrantless domestic spying” - that act alone would go a very long way to letting legislators know where the American public stands.
This affects every American, even those not participating on social media. Constitutionally oath-sworn officials are essentially policing, punishing and silencing LEGAL First Amendment activity - that the officials themselves disagree with - not illegal activity and not probable cause of a past crime.
Be patriotic, invest 5 minutes emailing Congress and your state legislature!
Wouldn't it be more effective to VOTE against warrantless domestic spying instead of paying the postal monopoly to fill Kleptocracy trashcans? The Don was painfully aware of the 4 million LP votes that made him a minority prez, and Trumpanzee shill rag The Hill published a hankie-twisting article pouting that "Libertarians Elected Biden." In actual fact, Libertarian spoiler votes defeated girl-bullying superstitious bigots who point guns at physicians and spy for asset forfeiture thugs. We mark our ballots in a slightly different place.
stay crazy, grandpa.
"If everyone merely wrote to their members of Congress and state legislators saying we “oppose warrantless domestic spying” - that act alone would go a very long way to letting legislators know where the American public stands."
.There that bullshit Liberal meme of " doing nothing is activism."
Theres no such thing as " calling your Rep."
.You call their Staffers who ignore you.
Its floated by Liberals as an evasive tactic when their corruption is being exposed and they want to deflect people to doing sonething useless.
Be patriotic, invest 5 minutes emailing Congress and your state legislature!
Yep, it's patriotic to get your name on a list of "known subversives."
^
Interesting that half the armed predatory snoops Tuccille's attachment lists are things every Libertarian ballot tells politicians to abolish. Everyone panicked into voting Kleptocracy is in fact giving those murdering goons a pat on the back and extra cash for union dues. The Bidenista and Trumpanzee™ parties are losing members while the population increases vertically. Surely this must transmit some factual information to anyone who knows better than to divide by zero.
Concidering Google was literally started as a way to make it easier for the Cia to spy on people is this surprising at all?
only to idiots. Yes.
Speaking of which, Beamer Boy Republican Madison "Hot Wheels" Cawthorn says to make threatening phone calls to other looter politicians (certainly not Him): 'If you don't support election integrity, I'm coming after you.'
That is guaranteed to bring back poll taxes, Jim Crow, Christian Front girl-bullying and Resurrect The Don. Go ahead... try it out.
ok, be less crazy, grandpa.
What really needs to be reported is that although the officials are intelligent, competent and otherwise good people “warrantless domestic spying” produces highly inaccurate and incompetent results.
This “technique” has totally missed almost every major national emergency from Pearl Harbor to January 6. This technique has harmed, destroyed and resulted in the premature deaths of likely thousands of innocent Americans.
The most accurate truth-gathering system - with the least amount of leaks - are not our national security agencies but our Judicial Branch courts. Courts legally require “confrontation” and outlaw non-confrontational blacklisting (ie: Cointelpro tactics) - information comes from the actual source (confronted) in an overt official process. Most important, any official accusing anyone of anything must risk penalty of perjury and contempt (risk of jail) for misrepresenting evidence when applying for judicial-warrants. This minimizes unconstitutional surveillance that punishes legal First Amendment activity. If there are abuses by officials, there is an actual paper-trail (or electronic trail) of this abuse for judges to audit.
The news story should be “the medicine is more dangerous than the ailment”. “Warrantless Domestic Spying” is a clear and present danger to every American and has rarely protected any of us. Government agencies are squandering taxpayer resources that could be used for things that do protect us - like hiring more police officers, community policing, jobs programs, etc. Most voters, of both parties, don’t like their tax dollars wasted like this.
Liar:
"This minimizes unconstitutional surveillance that punishes legal First Amendment activity".
They do it ANYWAY and hide behind Secret Courts.
Trolls like you favor making long posts that look intelligent and
inserting your lying talking points half way down...
.Trojan Horse.
I love that first line. That has got to be the all-time funniest one-liner I've ever read.
Everybody here understands how looters, shills and infiltrators need to wear masks and duck behind fake names... just as looter agents and bureaucrats seek to rob and coerce out of anonymous nacht und nebel.
They dont snitch me. Ive never been stupid and shallow enough to use Fuckbook or Twit.
When Fuckbook puts a yelliw border around a persons face, doesnt that PROVE what theyre up to?
.Facialrecognitiondatabasebook.
Those bastards built a multi billion dollar computer system and just give it away to people to post the pointless details of their lives bc. Zuckerturd has a warm heart and wants to ' give back?'
No, they have burrowed Fuckbook into your phone and cameras, and most web pages you visit to TRACK you.
I have a life and enough computer and networking knowlege to be as close to untraceable as practical.
I regularly freak online sellers out bc they cant track or ID me. Their problem, not mine.
Yeah, but as long they're snitching on "The Right People" no one cares.
Facebook is not revealing your personal information, you are revealing your personal information by posting it on Facebook!
I mean, DUH!
I have a millennial friend who was using Facebook as if it were his daily journal and diary. I suggested he stop. That what he posted was fully public and permanent. He did not listen. Now he is essentially blackballed from his industry because he did not keep his private thoughts private. He did not understand that everything he posted would be read by his boss, and by all potential employees. He is started to recover from this massive mistake made during his twenties, but the damage derailed his life.
So let me repeat yet again, FACEBOOK IS NOT YOUR PERSONAL DIARY! Everything you post is public, everything you post is viewable by anyone, everything you post is permanent.
If you can't deal with that, don't use Facebook.
This!
As a child of the 60's and 70's, I have never understood why someone would put all of the details of their life up for everyone to see. But then I see how many of my cohort are posting everything, and just shake my head..... "The Man" is not here to help you, did you all forget that?
>>Some FBI agents blamed their inability to anticipate the January 6 riot at the Capitol on
the fact that the *other* FBI agents didn't clue them in on the ruse.
"[A]ctual intent to carry out violence can be difficult to discern from the angry, hyperbolic—and constitutionally protected—speech and information commonly found on social media and other online platforms," Melissa Smislova, former head of Intelligence and Analysis for the Department of Homeland Security, told the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs last March.
I would suggest "Fuck Biden" is also generally hyperbole, and a good null test for whether the speaker means harm, or is just ranting.
I'm not sure what Facebook is, but I don't think I will be signing up anytime soon.
It's called thinning the herd. If someone is going to engage in activities that our masters will frown on, and is stupid enough to post their comings and goings for everyone to see, the race doesn't need them reproducing.
I was taught back in the 60's that anything electronic is NEVER private.
I was on FB for a few years, mainly to keep in touch with family and old Navy buddies. Then about the time of the "Me Too" shindig, one of my cousins went off the rails. She had become a certifiable man hater and was posting shit from protests that she attended. This was also the time when FB was getting hammered for accounts being hacked and private information being compromised. I deleted the account (they never really close them). I have seen supposedly well educated people post idiotic things on FB about their place of employment, customers and clients, even the boss, and get canned from their jobs. Common sense is an uncommon virtue these days.
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The threat is more from federal agencies than from state/local cops. Local LE doesn't have the resources, or the interest actually, to scroll through social media on fishing expeditions. If local LE looks at social media, or gets the providers to give them your materials, it's always because they are doing an actual investigation. Federal LE and Intel, though? They have the resources and the time to fish.
Yeah, aside from some gun related issues, I don't think most local cops conduct massive surveillance on people. Most Asian countries actually have local cyber police.
Came on this admonition a long time ago.
Never share, with anyone, anything you might wish to remain confidential, and lest one forget, never, never place any data you want to remain confidential in the same room with a computer.
Face Book is a snitch reads the headline. Does reference to being damned by faint praise ring familiar?