Discovering the identity of online posters
	
	
		https://www.americas1stfreedom.org/a...sk-gun-owners/
Recent federal decision in Arizona related to discovering the identity of online posters:
Imagine this scenario. You get up one morning, make your coffee and  check the news. You find that an online feature article in a big, urban  newspaper in your state is nothing but a one-sided, ignorant attack on  your right to bear arms. In this case the article is focused on  attacking a local firearms manufacturer, but it also impugns your Second  Amendment rights.
 Okay, that’s not so unusual, but this time you’ve either worked at  that company or know someone who does, so you decide to respond with the  facts. You go into the comment section below the article and soberly  show the journalist where they went wrong.
 Now you feel good about yourself. You’ve spoken up for your freedom  and kept your head about it. You used a screen name, so it was an  anonymous debate, as is your right. You only hope that your factual  response makes the journalist think. But later you hear the Department  of Justice (DOJ) is pressuring the newspaper to give them your IP  address, because they want to talk to you. 
Can they do this?
 
Yes, said a court.
 
In a case that could kick out the trusses of online freedom, Judge  Diane J. Humetewa of the U.S. District Court for the District of Arizona  ruled in June that the DOJ can force a private company—say, Facebook,  Yelp or a local media company—to give up your identity simply because  you expressed an opinion online. 
 
This  ruling occurred after the DOJ obtained a grand jury subpoena to  make Glassdoor, an online job-review website, give up the identities of  eight people (the DOJ initially wanted 125 peoples’ identities). The DOJ  wants these peoples’ internet protocol (IP) addresses, their credit  card information and other identifying details so it can identify them,  question them and perhaps compel them to testify against a company the  DOJ is investigating.
 
Glassdoor, a California-based company, quickly appealed the ruling to  the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals, which is where it stands at the time  of this writing.
 
If this ruling stands, this could affect speech across the internet.  And politically incorrect groups, such as those who choose to own guns,  could be particularly susceptible to any administration that opposes  their constitutional rights.
 
A state’s district attorney or a U.S. attorney, for example, could  use such a newfound power to go on a fishing expedition against citizens  or an industry it doesn’t like. It could force gun owners, for example,  who use internet pseudonyms while on a gun blog talking about a  manufacturer’s trigger system to be unmasked and dragged into a judicial  process.
 
Let’s  say such a person is a gunsmith or works for an outdoor retailer. The  spin that could result from them being subpoenaed could cause them to  lose their jobs or occupations—as it could do to the eight people the  DOJ is trying to force Glassdoor to reveal.
 
One thing the NRA has long lobbied against is allowing the government  to create databases of gun owners. Such a newfound power for government  could easily lead us in that direction. After all, “the right of the  people to keep and bear arms, shall not be infringed” includes  protecting the privacy of gun owners.
 
Brad Serwin, general counsel at Glassdoor, said: “We’d like a  precedent set that respects American freedom in today’s world. The  government is arguing they should be able to find out someone’s identity  as long as it is not acting in ‘bad faith.’ We’re arguing that, legally  speaking, the government is required to pass a ‘compelling interest’  test before being given the authority to demand people’s identities from  a private company.”
 
Fourth Amendment protections don’t block this because the government  is going after a private company (a third party) for these people's  info, so according to the Supreme Court’s “third-party doctrine” these  people have “no reasonable expectation of privacy.” According to this  judge, all those pseudonyms we see on social media and in comment  sections below articles are no protection if the government wants to  know who is speaking anonymously.
 
If this sounds like a lot of what-ifs, you’re right. But watching out  for our freedom by looking ahead for new pitfalls is part of keeping  our right to bear arms intact in this digital age.