#Facebook #WhatsApp #cybawar –
Facebook Executive Jailed in Brazil as Court Seeks WhatsApp Data : Brazilian
police arrested a senior Facebook Inc executive on Tuesday as a dispute
escalated over a court’s demand that the company provide data from its
WhatsApp messaging service to help in a secretive drug-trafficking
investigation.
Court officials in Sergipe state
confirmed that a judge had ordered the jailing of Facebook Vice
President for Latin America Diego Dzodan. Federal police in Sao Paulo
state said he was being held there for questioning.
Law enforcement officials withheld
further information about the nature of their request to the messaging
service that Facebook Inc acquired in 2014, saying that doing so could
compromise an ongoing criminal investigation.
The arrest, which Facebook called an
“extreme and disproportionate measure,” came as social media and
Internet companies face mounting pressure from governments around the
world to help them eavesdrop on users and filter content.
Arrests of officials from social media
companies are extremely rare, though not unprecedented, because the
companies typically comply with local court orders, especially from
countries where they have branch offices.
“Precisely because these large global
Internet companies have staff in many countries who are vulnerable to
legal action including arrest and criminal charges, they generally do
comply with legally binding requests from authorities for user data or
to remove or block content in those countries where they have ‘boots on
the ground,'” said Internet freedom activist Rebecca MacKinnon.
Prior to its acquisition by Facebook,
California-based WhatsApp had less skin in the game in disputes with
governments outside the United States because, unlike Facebook, it did
not have staff scattered around the globe.
“WhatsApp is a company that was started
very focused on US laws,” said Internet law attorney Marcia Hoffmann.
“Now that it’s owned by a company with people and resources in other
countries, there is more leverage for those governments to put pressure
in new and in different ways. Arresting executives is one of them.”
While details of the case remain murky,
court officials said the judge in Brazil resorted to the arrest after
issuing a fine of BRL 1 million ($250,000) to compel Facebook to help
investigators access WhatsApp messages relevant to their
drug-trafficking investigation.
That is likely impossible because
WhatsApp began using end-to-end encryption technology in 2014 that
prevents the company from monitoring messages that travel across its
network, said Christopher Soghoian, principal technologist with the
American Civil Liberties Union.
“They are using technology to try to
take themselves out of the surveillance business,” Soghoian said. The
arrest surfaced as Apple Inc finds itself at odds with the United States
government on similar grounds.
US prosecutors want the company to build
a software tool to help investigators unlock the iPhone used by one of
the shooters in the San Bernardino, California, attacks. Apple has
refused, saying it would set a dangerous precedent that would make its
customers vulnerable to spying.
Privacy concerns have previously put
Facebook at odds with Brazilian law enforcement seeking evidence in
criminal cases, although the confrontations rarely rise to the
prominence of Apple’s current standoff with the US authorities.
In December, a judge suspended
Facebook’s popular WhatsApp phone-messaging service in Brazil for about
12 hours after it failed to comply with two court orders to share
information in a criminal case.
Brazil passed an Internet law two years
ago aimed at streamlining thorny legal issues, but lower courts still
have vast discretionary powers according to legal expert Ronaldo Lemos, a
chief architect of that 2014 law. “The court of appeals tends to be
more sensitive in these cases, but the lower courts are still tough, as
today’s decision shows,” said Lemos.
Source: ndtv
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