Courts Have Ordered Google To Share Personal Info About Some YouTube Users



Federal authorities have reportedly ordered Google to provide information about viewers of select YouTube videos including their names, addresses, and phone numbers as well as provide information about video viewers who aren’t even signed into a YouTube account while viewing the videos. The requests are raising alarms from privacy experts who say that the requests are not only unconstitutional but that they are “transforming search warrants into digital dragnets” potentially targeting individuals who are in no way associated with a crime based simply on what they may have watched online.Specifically, authorities have reportedly asked for information about individuals who watched certain videos open on the site between January 1-8, 2023 as part of an investigation into “elonmuskwhm.” The authorities also requested the user activity for those accounts.According to Forbes, the investigation into elonmuskwhm is focused on that individual selling Bitcoin for cash, which is a violation of money laundering laws. The sale also constitutes an unlicensed money-transferring business. As part of the investigation undercover agents reportedly sent links of YouTube tutorials for mapping via drones an augmented reality software to elonmuskwhm and then asked Google to provide details on who had viewed the videos. The videos received more than 30,000 views.According to documents viewed by Forbes, a court granted the government’s request for the information; however, it asked Google to not publicize the request.In the court order, the authorities commented “There is reason to believe that these records would be relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation, including by providing identification information about the perpetrators.”And that’s not the only time the courts have asked for user data from YouTube.

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Forbes reports that in another case authorities requested user data after discovering that video of officers investigating a bomb threat in Portsmouth, New Hampshire was being broadcast over a YouTube livestream, an act which officers said had occurred with other bomb threats in other parts of the country as well.In both cases, it’s unclear whether or not Google complied with the requests.

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