top of page

DOJ Error Reveals Google as Company Battling National Security Letters

Writer's picture: OurStudioOurStudio

Google's name might be household fare for the rest of us, but in at least one national security court case, it is still subject to redaction—as long as the government remembers to obfuscate all instances of the company's name.

The Wall Street Journal reported that a Department of Justice court filing on August 23 in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York didn't redact Google's name in one instance from the document, finally confirming what many had suspected: that Google was the unnamed company fighting the government's use of National Security Letters to gain access to company-owned data.

Google is one of the few companies thought to have contested such requests. Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney Matt Zimmerman told Bloomberg in April that the US government has issued more than 300,000 such letters since 2000, which have been contested only by four or five recipients.

0 views0 comments

Comments


NEWSLETTERS

Get Reason In Your Inbox.

Thanks for submitting!

Join the

LIBERTARIAN PARTY

We are funded entirely by Americans who want to help give liberty a voice. By joining the Libertarian Party as a dues-paying member, you are investing in this critical work.

Thanks for submitting!

ADDRESS

1444 Duke St.

Alexandria, VA 22314-3403

PHONE

(800) ELECT-US

(800) 353-2887

EMAIL

bottom of page