The Case Of Glassdoor And The Grand Jury Subpoena, And How Courts Are Messing With Online Speech In Secret
from the it-ain't-so-grand dept
In my last post, I discussed why it is so important for platforms to be able to speak about the discovery demands they receive, seeking to unmask their anonymous users. That candor is crucially important in ensuring that unmasking demands can't damage the key constitutional right to speak anonymously, without some sort of check against their abuse.
The earlier post rolled together several different types of discovery instruments (subpoenas, warrants, NSLs, etc.) because to a certain extent it doesn't matter which one is used to unmask an anonymous user. The issue raised by all of them is that if their power to unmask an anonymous user is too unfettered, then it will chill all sorts of legitimate speech. And, as noted in the last post, the ability for a platform receiving an unmasking demand to tell others it has received it is a critical check against unworthy demands seeking to unmask the speakers behind lawful speech.
The details of each type of unmasking instrument do matter, though, because each one has different interests to balance and, accordingly, different rules governing how to balance them. Unfortunately, the rules that have evolved for any particular one are not always adequately protective of the important speech interests any unmasking demand necessarily affects. As is the case for the type of unmasking demand at issue in this post: a federal grand jury subpoena.
Grand jury subpoenas are very powerful discovery instruments, and with good reason: the government needs a powerful weapon to be able to investigate serious crimes. There are also important constitutional reasons for why we equip grand juries with strong investigatory power, because if charges are to be brought against people, it's important for due process reasons that they have been brought by the grand jury, as opposed to a more arbitrary exercise of government power. Grand juries are, however, largely at the disposal of government prosecutors, and thus a grand jury subpoena essentially functions as a government unmasking demand. The ability to compel information via a grand jury subpoena is therefore not a power we can allow to exist unchecked.
Which brings us to the story of the grand jury subpoena served on Glassdoor, which Paul Levy and Ars Technica wrote about earlier this year. It's a story that raises three interrelated issues: (1) a poor balancing of the relevant interests, (2) a poor structural model that prevented a better balancing, and (3) a gag that has made it extraordinarily difficult to create a better rule governing how grand jury subpoenas should be balanced against important online speech rights.
Glassdoor is a platform focused on hosting user-provided information about employers. Much of the speech it hosts is necessarily contributed anonymously so that the speakers can avoid any fallout from their candor. This is the sort of fallout that, if they had to incur it, would discourage them from contributing information others might find valuable. The seriousness of these sorts of consequences is why the district court decision denying Glassdoor's attempts to resist the grand jury subpoena seeking to unmask their users reflects such a poor balancing of the relevant interests. Perhaps if the subpoena had been intended to unmask people the government believed were themselves guilty of the crime being investigated, the balance might have tipped more in favor of enforcing it. But the people who the subpoena was seeking to unmask were simply suspected as possibly knowing something about the crime that others were apparently committing. It is not unreasonable for the government to want to be able to talk to witnesses, but that desire to talk to them is not the only interest present here. These are people who were simply availing themselves of their right to speak anonymously, and who, if this subpoena is enforced, are going to be shocked to suddenly find the government on their doorstep wanting to talk to them.
This sort of unmasking is chilling to them and anyone else who might want to speak anonymously because it means that there's no way they ever will be able to speak should their speech happen to ever somehow relate (however tangentially) to someone else's criminal behavior. It is also inconsistent with the purported goal of fighting crime because it will prevent criminal behavior from coming to light in the first place, for few will want to offer up information if it will only tempt trouble for them at some point in the future.
This mis-balancing of interests is almost a peripheral issue in this case, however. The more significant structural concern is why such a weak balancing test was used. As discussed previously, in order to protect the ability to speak anonymously online, it is important for a platform to be able to resist demands to unmask their users in cases where the reason for the unmasking does not substantially outweigh the need to protect people's right to speak anonymously online. But the district court denied Glassdoor's attempt to resist the subpoena when it chose to apply the test from Branzburg v. Hayes, a Supreme Court case focused on the ability to resist a grand jury subpoena. Branzburg, however, has nothing to do with the Internet or Internet platforms. It is a case from the 1970s that was solely focused on whether the First Amendment gave journalists the right to resist a grand jury subpoena. Ultimately it decided that they generally had no such right, at least so long as the government was not shown to be acting in bad faith, which, while not nothing, is not a standard that is particularly protective of anonymity. It also barely even addressed the interests of the confidential sources themselves, dismissing their interest in maintaining anonymity as a mere "preference," and one the Court presumed was being sought only to shield themselves from prosecution for their own criminal culpability.
The upshot of Branzburg is that the journalist, as an intermediary for a source's information, had no right to resist a grand jury subpoena. Unfortunately, Branzburg simply can't be extended to the online world where, for better or worse, essentially all speech must be intermediated by some sort of platform or service in order to happen. The need to let the platforms resist grand jury subpoenas therefore has less to do with whether an intermediary itself has a right to resist them and everything to do with the the right of their users to speak anonymously, which, far from being a preference, is an affirmative right the Supreme Court, after Branzburg, subsequently recognized.
A better test, and one that respects the need to maintain this critical speech right, is therefore needed, which is why Glassdoor appealed the district court's ruling. Unfortunately, its appeal has raised a third issue: while there is often a lot of secrecy surrounding a grand jury investigation, in part because it makes sense to keep the subject of an investigation in the dark, preserving that level of secrecy does not necessarily require keeping absolutely everything related to the subpoena under seal. Fortunately the district court (and the DOJ, who agreed to this) recognized that some information could safely be released, particularly related to Glassdoor's challenge of the subpoena's enforcement generally, and thanks to that limited unsealing we can tell that the case involved a misapplication of Branzburg to an Internet platform.
Unfortunately the Ninth Circuit didn't agree to this limited disclosure and sealed the entirety of Glassdoor's appeal, even the parts that were already made public. The effects of this sealing included that it became impossible for potential amici to weigh in in support of Glassdoor and to argue for a better rule that would allow platforms to better protect the speech rights of their users. While Glassdoor had been ably litigating the case, the point of amicus briefs is to help the court see the full implications of a particular ruling on interests beyond those immediately before it, which is a hard thing for the party directly litigating to do itself. The reality is that Glassdoor is not the first, and will not be the last, platform to get a grand jury subpoena, but unless the rules governing platforms' ability to resist are stronger than what's afforded by Branzburg, the privacy protection speakers have depended on will continue to evaporate should their speech ever happen to capture the interest of a federal prosecutor with access to grand jury.
For all we know, of course, the Ninth Circuit might have seen its point and quashed the subpoena. Or maybe it upheld it and maybe the FBI has now unpleasantly surprised those Glassdoor users. We may never know, just as we may never know if there are other occasions where courts have used specious reasoning to allow grand jury subpoenas to strip speakers of their anonymity. Even if the Ninth Circuit indeed fixed the problems with this questionable attempt at unmasking, by doing it in secret it's missed an important opportunity to provide guidance to lower courts to help ensure that they don't allow other questionable attempts to keep happening to speakers in the future.
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Filed Under: anonymity, gag orders, sealed dockets, subpoenas, warrants
Companies: glassdoor
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You can indict a ham sandwich. Since the education system and the legal system have worked tirelessly to keep citizens ignorant of constitutional rights the process is essentially broken and meaningless right now.
http://www.slate.com/blogs/lexicon_valley/2014/11/25/sol_wachtler_the_judge_who_coined_indict_a_ ham_sandwich_was_himself_indicted.html
Perception is indeed reality! You can be perfect at your job but you won't keep it if your boss thinks otherwise!
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Now nearly 30 years latter I have developed a few rules.
Never post anything on line that you are not willing to nail to the police's jail house door as everything you post can be and will be twisted, mangled, and mutilated to the point you have no idea what you or anyone else said or meant.
If there is a choice between posting and not posting, DO NOT POST.
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Re:
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Re: Re:
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Corruption
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Re: Corruption
The core problem with America right now lies directly with the largely ignored legislature and the two party system. Both the Executive and Judicial Branches could be complete reformed by a functional legislature. All 3 could be completely reformed by a convention of states as well.
Most of the long term power is with the legislature, which is why it has the most members. We have never really been 3 equal branches of government, just that each branch has tools to put the others in check in certain circumstances.
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Re: Re: Corruption
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Re: Corruption
And if you try to point it out to them, they jail you for contempt of court.
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Re: Re: Corruption
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Thinly veiled attempt at censoring?
idk, but it smells bad.
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Re:
Yes, given that Glassdoor doesn't actually allow anonymous use: "Help Us Keep Glassdoor Safe - We have been receiving some suspicious activity from you or someone sharing your internet network. Please help us keep Glassdoor safe by verifying that you're a real person. We are sorry for the inconvenience. If you continue to see this message, please email [image] to let us know you're having trouble. - Code: CF-103"
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Here's a thought: Let the Feds themselves take anonymous info from anyone who wants to volunteer potential evidence of wrongdoing (aka "whistleblowing"), and take it seriously. I am sure they would have plenty of grist for their mill. (And then the whistleblowers can have FBI-style informant anonymity protection.)
Yeah. Naaahhhh.
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Re: Going Dark
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On the technical solution side ...
The government cannot obtain what the platform does not store. Platforms that design their storage and business model to retain only the minimum necessary for the stated purpose will have less to give when the demand is served.
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Same problem - child welfare, psychiatrists
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Sunlight is Always the Best Disenfectant
The Case Of Glassdoor And The Grand Jury Subpoena, And How Courts Are Messing With Online Speech In Secret
Is there any justice to be found in secret courts, secret evidence and secret laws?
As the so-called justice system in the US repeatedly makes abundantly clear is our least fortunate and most vulnerable persons are unable to afford the cost of adequate legal representation.
In the US where over 70% of all working Americans live paycheck to paycheck does an individual have the financial wherewithal to challenge a grand jury subpoena?
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-08-24/heres-how-many-americans-are-living-paycheck-payc heck-hint-its-lot
The US governments three tiered "justice" system is a tyrants wet dream.
The first tier of US "justice" encompasses national security and state secrets doctrine where the pitch-dark underbelly of the state hides behind the "law".
The second tier of US "justice" is comprised of the affluent and well credentialed where your bank account and connections can override the governments search for justice.
The third tier of US "justice" is for our societies most vulnerable those least able to afford counsel those without political voice and rendered silent by default.
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Re: Sunlight is Always the Best Disenfectant
A Grand Jury is not exactly secret; it's comprised of citizens, your PEERS in this realm where we're all equal before The Law. It's not a Star Chamber by unaccountable Royalty. Grand Juries can in theory investigate anything, because the persons on a Jury are The Law, representing all folk in common law. Information and charges are kept secret for two key purposes: to protect the innocent and not tip off the guilty to flee. IF the Jury decides there's likely enough evidence to convict, then charges are brought.
You've just been bamboozled by this over-arguing, lousy-writing, corporatist lawyer into believing that the good strong privacy protection afforded to citizens by the Grand Jury process is in fact a danger.
Rest of what you write is good yet off-topic!
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"Glassdoor" to be OPAQUE when it wants to be, eh?
One commenter has already stated it right: if you don't accept risk of becoming known, then don't publish.
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Re: "Glassdoor" to be OPAQUE when it wants to be, eh?
1) WHY are Internet corporations specially privileged?
2) WHY are Internet users to be more protected than, say, chatting loudly in a bar? Can police NOT ask a bartender if knows names?
3) WHY are Internet corporations expending lawyer time -- which we're constantly told is very costly -- to shield users? What's in this for the corporations? They ALL shell out as first line of defense lawyers...
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Re: Re: "Glassdoor" to be OPAQUE when it wants to be, eh?
5) **By the way, don't overlook possibility that this corporation's REAL interest may be in hiding that it's been astro-turfing!** We know nothing except that it's paying high for alleged "public interest".
From this and prior articles I conclude opinionist's real motive is protecting corporations from ANY investigation. Opinions always just happen to suit corporate interests -- yet present NO clear danger to me, you, or these users, ever, it's just abstract FUD.
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Re: Re: Re: "Glassdoor" to be OPAQUE when it wants to be, eh?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: "Glassdoor" to be OPAQUE when it wants to be, eh?
if you don't accept risk of becoming known, then don't publish
You really, really suck at taking your own advice, don't you blue?
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Do you have any concern for all the resources Techdirt has wasted by publishing your inane ramblings over the years?
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Balancing and the real world
Branzburg may actually be reasonable to apply here, for a very simple reason that Techdirt has pushed time and again: Everyone is a reporter. When you choose to right a report / story on Glassdoor (or anywhere else for that matter) you are reporting. It's perhaps going all the way to the end of the ball field to get a favorable judgement, but it doesn't appear to be far off.
As someone else (who was censored) mention here, what about a conversation overheard in a bar? A grand jury could very easily request records for credit card transactions or even video of the bar to figure out who the person was. A bar and a website are, essentially, both privately owned businesses. The rules should apply more or less equally here.
As for the chilling of speech, let's be fair here. If you are having second thoughts about muck slinging your previous company because you might face legal problems, perhaps chilling your speech is the best option. Hoping that a wafer thin "everything online is anonymous" concept will protect you is just wrong. To be honest, the internet has warmed speech to levels that really make no sense at times, perhaps a little chilling would be a good idea.
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Re: Balancing and the real world
As for the rest, it's disguised as a reasonable comment but it greatly misses the point.
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Re: Re: Balancing and the real world
Posting a bad review of your job on glassdoor or whatever isn't whistleblowing. Spend a while cruising the site, and you will find mostly malcontents who didn't fit into a company's culture ragging on about how they didn't get the right type of coffee machine in their department. It's laughable.
Nobody wants to drag them into the light. Who cares, right?
Now, the real whistle blowers generally aren't going to be posting their grand expose on a job review site. They are going to be emailing wikileaks or sending anonymous emails to CNN or whatever. If they have a story to tell, they will want to tell it. Again, nobody is dragging them into the light.
However, if someone does happen to mention something that might prove to be have probative value or might help authorities with an ongoing investigation, would it not be good for police to be able to discreetly make contact with them?
You know discreet - a gag order summons for personal information so they can try to find the person and talk to them - without dragging them into the light.
Seems they went pretty far out of their way to keep this out of the light, but Glassdoor themselves seem intent on making it public. Perhaps you should get angry with them, they seem to be the one shining the bright lights around.
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Re: Re: Re: Balancing and the real world
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Re: Re: Re: Balancing and the real world
"Now, the real whistle blowers generally aren't going to be posting their grand expose on a job review site. "
Why not? It's not malpractice in the sense the company is doing something criminal or the likes. It's the company being general asses towards their employees. Again, it's more mundane, it's about bad ergonomics, prejudice and stuff that happen often but aren't the thing CNN is going to reprt every time but that people looking for a job may want to know.
"However, if someone does happen to mention something that might prove to be have probative value or might help authorities with an ongoing investigation, would it not be good for police to be able to discreetly make contact with them?"
May, might, possibly. Read the article. It's about a system that's flawed and it's being misused by the government. It is exposing people yes. Or maybe you are too naïve and you believe there are no promiscuous relations between the private sector and the govt? Discreetly make contact was gold comedy.
The problem is not making it 'public' it's making it known to the right parties. The problem is anonymity going out the window. As I said, you miss the point greatly.
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Re: Re: Balancing and the real world
Up to the point where the courts allow it to feed their conviction rate, then he's suddenly all for it.
horse with no name just hates it when due process is enforced.
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