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April 14, 2016

Microsoft sues US government to remove gag on data requests

by John_A

Apple may have the eye of the US government when it comes to encryption, but Microsoft is taking aim at the Justice Department as well. Bloomberg reports Redmond is suing the government over the right to tell its customers when the authorities ask it to hand over data. In a complaint filed today in Seattle’s US district court, the company says the 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act is unconstitutional, not only violating its First Amendment rights, but also the Fourth Amendment’s right to be notified when the government searches and/or seizes property.

Sure, Microsoft’s lawsuit aims to protect civil liberties, but the company says it also wants to ensure it can continue to sell products that its customers can trust. The company argues that the government has placed it under an unlimited gag order, forcing it to refrain from informing customers when the authorities request emails and other information. And that the gag order violates the free speech protections of the First Amendment.

The company is no stranger to battles with the US government over customer privacy and security. In 2014, for example, Microsoft resisted a demand to seize offshore email accounts stored at a data center in Ireland. Redmond is not alone in the fight for more transparency when it comes to government requests, either. Both Google and Twitter want to be able to disclose more information on the number of national security letters it receives. Twitter filed a lawsuit in 2014, asking a court to declare the government’s restrictions on what it’s able to disclose in transparency reports a violation of the First Amendment.

Source: Bloomberg

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