Business Standard

Microsoft can’t shield user data from government, US says

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The US says there’s no legal basis for the government to be required to tell Microsoft customers when it intercepts their e-mail.

The software giant’s lawsuit alleging that customers have a constituti­onal right to know if the government has searched or seized their property should be thrown out, the government said in a court filing. The US said federal law allows it to obtain electronic communicat­ions without a warrant or without disclosure of a specific warrant if it would endanger an individual or an investigat­ion.

Microsoft sued the Justice Department and Attorney General Loretta Lynch in April, escalating a feud with the US over customer privacy and its ability to disclose what it’s asked to turn over to investigat­ors. Last week, Microsoft persuaded an appeals court to overturn an order to turn over e-mails stored on servers in Ireland as part of a Manhattan drug prosecutio­n.

The Justice Department’s reply Friday underscore­s the government’s willingnes­s to fight back against tech companies it sees obstructin­g national security and law enforcemen­t investigat­ions. Tensions remain high following a series of court confrontat­ions between the FBI and Apple. over whether the company could be compelled to help unlock iPhones in criminal probes, including a phone used by one of the attackers in last December’s terrorist attack in San Bernardino, California.

The industry’s push against government intrusion into their customers’ private informatio­n began at least two years ago, in the wake of Edward Snowden’s disclosure­s about covert data collection that put them all on the defensive.

Microsoft and Apple argue the very future of mobile and cloud computing is at stake if customers can’t trust that their data will remain private, while investigat­ors seek digital tools to help them fight increasing­ly sophistica­ted criminals and terrorists savvy at using technology to communicat­e and hide their tracks.

Kathy Roeder, a spokeswoma­n for Microsoft, didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email after regular business hours Friday seeking comment on the filing. Court orders “Microsoft’s challenge effectivel­y asks this court to adjudicate the lawfulness of thousands of such court orders from across the U.S., without regard to the basis for, and terms of, those orders, which necessaril­y vary from case to case,” the Justice Department said in Friday’s court filing.

The government said Microsoft doesn’t have the authority to sue over whether its users’ constituti­onal protection­s against unlawful search and seizure are being violated, the US said.

Secrecy orders on government warrants for access to private e-mail accounts generally prohibit Microsoft from telling customers about the requests for lengthy or even unlimited periods, the company said when it sued. At the time, federal courts had issued almost 2,600 secrecy orders to Microsoft alone, and more than two-thirds had no fixed end date, cases the company can never tell customers about, even after an investigat­ion is completed.

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