What's new

Facebook tells DEA: Stop impersonating users

O

OGShaman

Facebook has sent a letter to the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration demanding that agents stop impersonating users on the social network.

The letter follows a BuzzFeed report that revealed how the DEA seized a woman's phone and later created a Facebook account in her name.

Sondra Arquiett was unaware as the DEA masqueraded as her while speaking to her friends. The DEA even posted photos of her with her son and another photo of her alone in panties and a bra.

She has sued the DEA agent who set up the account. The Justice Department is backing him up, claiming federal agents have the right to do such things.

Now Arquiett has Facebook (FB, Tech30) on her side.
"The DEA's deceptive actions... threaten the integrity of our community," Facebook chief security officer Joe Sullivan wrote to DEA head Michele Leonhart. "Using Facebook to impersonate others abuses that trust and makes people feel less safe and secure when using our service."

The letter goes on to say that Facebook shut down the DEA's fake Arquiett account. It also demands that the DEA confirm it stopped all other cases of impersonation.

The DEA declined to comment and referred all questions to the Justice Department, which has not returned CNNMoney's calls.

How did the DEA end up with this woman's phone? In 2010, Arquiett was arrested and faced charges related to cocaine distribution. She pled guilty and received probation.

In legal filings, a federal prosecutor said Arquiett "implicitly consented by granting access to the information stored in her cell phone and by consenting to the use of that information to aid in an ongoing criminal investigations [sic]."

But in its letter, Facebook said it is "deeply troubled" by that legal position.

Privacy researcher Runa Sandvik, who advises the Freedom of the Press Foundation, explained it this way: It's one thing to strike a deal and become an informant. It's another to lose complete control of your online identity.

"Isn't this the definition of identity theft?" Sandvik asked.
This is only the latest case in which the technology firm comes head-to-head with the federal government on civil liberties issues.

Facebook has asked for more transparency about NSA spying on Americans. CEO Mark Zuckerberg has called President Obama to complain about it. And Facebook is fighting in court to have the Manhattan district attorney's office justify its seizure of 381 people's accounts.

http://money.cnn.com/2014/10/20/technology/security/facebook-dea/index.html
 

LEF

Active member
Veteran
fb to me it is enslavement

some companies are starting to hire only through fb

you know how in gradeschool, you could write a paper by hand, then computers came by, and then you couldn't write paper by hand anymore

I feel it's the same with the fb
no turning back

like those kids always stuck with a cellphone in their hand

that said, I think the DEA are acting like criminals but I think that's nothing new
 
Last edited:

The Revolution

Active member
Veteran
Facebook is a trap! Thats fucking crooked as hell.. They use any illegal tactic they can to collect intel than make it look like it was gathered legally.. Fucking crooked pigs. Probation/parole officers in my county will make fake profiles with hot chicks for profile pictures, then they get added to a network of friends and spy on their parolees. PPl are going to jail bc facebook pictures.. Your page is private but a friend decides to share or post a pic of u out at the pub, or on a trip having a beer, the parole officers get ahold of it, and your getting locked up over a picture.. Fuck facebook
 

420somewhere

Hi ho here we go
Veteran
NO Facebook for me ....

NO Facebook for me ....

I have had my own personal website for more than 20 years. (I worked on ARPNET before the Internet)

When FB came out I thought WTF - I am already on the web who needs this shit.

I never got caught up in the other B.S. either.

What are people thinking?

If you know me you can get ahold of me, guaranteed :tiphat:
.
 
R

Red Berry

fb to me it is enslavement

some companies are starting to hire only through fb

you know how in gradeschool, you could write a paper by hand, then computers came by, and then you couldn't write paper by hand anymore

I feel it's the same with the fb
no turning back

like those kids always stuck with a cellphone in their hand

that said, I think the DEA are acting like criminals but I think that's nothing new

How does it compare to icmag? :biggrin:
 

LEF

Active member
Veteran
I hear facebook is having less and less users every year now.

The thing is, some people like to have multiple accounts.
 
Last edited:

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
ya right,,,,,, that would work as well as sending the IRS a letter telling em they tax us too damn much and you would like more money back.... my face fuck account aint in my name ...
 

JointOperation

Active member
facebooks gotta act like they care.. but like verizon.APPLE. MICROSOFT.. and the rest of them. they get paid to hand over information.. they dont give a fuck.. they act like it to make people stay on facebook.. very simple..

the fbi/cia wants to bug everyones house in america.. how can they do it? how about.. let the people BUG IT FOR EM.. get in with a few companies. invent the smart phone.. then smart tv.. and then soon it will be Smart Brains.. lol.. so they can bug your home. with you purchasing the equipment to do so . perfect idea. all u gotta do is harass a company for a few.. and then tell them this will all go away plus we will pay you.. if you just allow us to put a camera and microphone in this TV. Iphone..

so instead of having a fbi or cia officer bugging your house like in the sopranos.. they just get into bed with a few companies.. and they are in every house in america.. JUST LIKE THAT.... great plan.. easy to keep terrorist at a all time low.while puttin fear in every citizen in the country.

its the REAL BIG BROTHER.. it CAME TO LIFE under George W. and OBAMA..

and the first way they tested to see if we would get on board.. was on star.. and other car shit.. they figure if we can bug someones car without them knowing or caring.. we could get them to bug there houses.. in the name of technology.
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
not my place...no one is gonna spy on me...I even have a bug detector lol.... I will never own a car with onstar... I actually turned down a good deal because said vehicle had it...I have no idea how to disconnect it ... with new canbus setups it might be hard/almost impossible I don't know
 

JointOperation

Active member
well now.. every single new car has a tracking device.. wether its satelite radio.. gps navigation.. onstar.. or the new wifi in your car..

basically your best bet.. on cars is just grab something a little older.. and make it nasty yourself lol .
 

amannamedtruth

Active member
Veteran
There's got to be a pretty easy way to get rid of unwanted GPS tracking in your vehicle. Start with the fusebox diagram...

But I guess it doesn't even matter if you carry any type of cell phone, as triangulation is a well tested method.
 

stoned-trout

if it smells like fish
Veteran
ha hahahahahahaha...don't make it easy on em...the new wiring after 2006 I think is complicated and I bet just taking out a fuse wont stop onstar and such but that's a guess...I am gonna ask a few tech friends... I like to buy base model cars and upgrade myself ....yeehaw
 

mr. gt

Active member
^^basically every computer in a car has a power source and a ground wire. If you disconnect them, than it won't work. (it may have a small capacitor in it).
 
Top