Analyzing all your dumb tweets is what is eroticism consumptionbig business, and for the big data company Dataminr that business just so happened to involve helping police surveil Black Lives Matter demonstrators following the killing of George Floyd.
So reports the Intercept, which on Thursday detailed how the New York-based data company alerted law enforcement to protests across the country. Dataminr, which bills itself as offering a "real-time AI platform [that] detects the earliest signals of high-impact events and emerging risks from within publicly available data," hoovers up all public-facing Twitter data, quickly digests it, and offers customer-relevant insights.
When the customer happens to be police departments across the country, apparently those insights include tracking constitutionally protected activities like peaceful protest.
The ACLU of Minnesota wasn't happy with the news, and criticized Twitter for allowing Dataminr access to its data.
"Let us be clear: By allowing this practice, @Twitter is directly endangering protesters," announced the organization. "These actions aid surveillance and risk exposing people to investigations, watchlists, and state violence for calling attention to injustice and exercising their First Amendment rights."
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
We reached out to Dataminr in an attempt to confirm the Intercept's report, but received no immediate response. Twitter, on the other hand, had plenty to say.
"We see a societal benefit in public Twitter data being used for news alerting, first responder support, and disaster relief," wrote a company spokesperson over email. "Twitter prohibits the use of our developer services for surveillance purposes. Period."
Indeed, Twitter's developer terms are clear: "We prohibit the use of Twitter data and the Twitter APIs by any entity for surveillance purposes, or in any other way that would be inconsistent with our users' reasonable expectations of privacy."
So what happened here? Well, Twitter insists that the data pulled by Dataminr is all public — that is to say, only public-facing tweets — and as such is fair game. Which may be true as far as Twitter's policies are concerned, but that doesn't make the Intercept's findings any more palatable.
"Dataminr meticulously tracked not only ongoing protests, but kept comprehensive records of upcoming anti-police violence rallies in cities across the country to help its staff organize their monitoring efforts, including events' expected time and starting location within those cities," reads the Intercept's report. "A protest schedule seen by The Intercept shows Dataminr was explicitly surveilling dozens of protests big and small, from Detroit and Brooklyn to York, Pennsylvania, and Hampton Roads, Virginia."
Dataminr, for its part, offers a product called First Alert which the company advertises as "[alerting] first responders to breaking events, enabling the fastest real-time response."
It was the First Alert product that reportedly kept law enforcement abreast of protesters' movements — often, according to the Intercept, explicitly peaceful protesters were monitored in this way.
"We proactively enforce our policies to ensure customers are in compliance and will continue to do so," concluded the Twitter spokesperson. "We consistently hold ourselves accountable to rigorous standards, including third-party audits of key products and services like Dataminr."
SEE ALSO: Police used ‘smart streetlights’ to surveil protesters, just as privacy groups warned
And rigorous standards, in theory, are good. Practically, however, when your self-described rigorous standards allow for private companies to enable those who wield violent force against peaceful protesters, they become less so.
The 2000s laid out a roadmap for modern superhero moviesAngela Merkel welcomes peck on the cheek from Justin TrudeauWalmart might buy TikTok. Really.Walmart might buy TikTok. Really.Parakeet only wants to be friends with birds, real or not, who look exactly like itselfTrevor Noah is trolling Trump with a fulliPhone 12 Pro Max leak appears to confirm rumored features including 120hz display, LiDAR autoAustralian journalist's blistering takedown of Trump goes viralChina starts blocking mentions of Putin online, in case you say anything nasty about himHurricane Laura topples a controversial Confederate monument in LouisianaDonald Trump Jr tweets himself into a deeper hole, just like his dadSteve Carell describes the 'emotional torture' of leaving 'The Office'It took less than a week for Nevada to start running out of legal marijuanaPhotos: The 2020 March on WashingtonBig pup spooked by extremely tiny kitten while trying to make friendsDad is extremely committed to making a really good dad jokeAmazon's first Fresh grocery store opens in Los Angeles'Black Panther' star Chadwick Boseman has diedHere's a perfume that's supposed to smell like losing a toothSo many good doggos celebrated Pride in London along with their humans NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for January 29: Tips to solve Connections #128 Federal workers on Reddit resist Trump 'buyout' offer DeepSeek AI gets hit with data privacy red flag by Italy and Ireland 'Sing Sing' review: Colman Domingo delivers in prison Best Jabra Elite 10 deal: Save $100 at Best Buy LA Clippers vs. San Antonio Spurs 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online The 'Office' quote that defined Kevin Malone, according to the actor himself NYT mini crossword answers for January 29, 2025 Lunar New Year game deals: Save up to 50% at Xbox, Ubisoft, and Steam Levoit cordless vacuum deal: $149.99 at Amazon Best headphones deal: Save 43% on the Souncore V20i headphones at Amazon Best Costco deal: Save $15 on delivery orders of $50 or more Best Anker deal: Save $12 on Soundcore 2 portable speaker Google 'Ask for me:' AI that calls businesses on your behalf for pricing and availability Best Lego Botanicals deal: Save $12 on Bouquet of Roses for Valentine's Day Dallas Mavericks vs. New Orleans Pelicans 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online NYT Strands hints, answers for January 30 Best travel deal: Book flights for as low as $49 each way with JetBlue Best RTX 5080 gaming PC deal: CyberPowerPC Gamer Supreme for $2,699.99 Stephen King's 'The Monkey' review on Threads is pretty unambiguous
2.0947s , 10195.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【what is eroticism consumption】,Unobstructed Information Network