CarolKing
Singer of songs and a vapor connoisseur
Facebook has sent a strongly-worded letter to the U.S.'s DEA (Drug Enforcement Administration) telling them to stop creating accounts on the social network to impersonal real people and try to catch criminals. This comes shortly after the government agency was revealed to have used a real woman's identity to message others offering drugs, eventually getting the woman wrongly arrested.
While the U.S. Department of Justice has tried to defendthe DEA's actions, Facebook chief security officer Joe Sullivan wrote that the company is "deeply troubled" by what happened, and argues that its terms and policies were violated, specifically the real identity requirements. The letter continues that law enforcement agencies are not above these rules, and such sting operations are a threat to Facebook's integrity, and its users' trust.
In a response to BuzzFeed, a Justice Department spokesman said that the DEA's case was still being reviewed, adding that as far as they know, they don't believe law enforcement agencies resort to this sort of practice frequently. In other words, the Justice Department is just going to go with the benefit of the doubt on this activity.
While the U.S. Department of Justice has tried to defendthe DEA's actions, Facebook chief security officer Joe Sullivan wrote that the company is "deeply troubled" by what happened, and argues that its terms and policies were violated, specifically the real identity requirements. The letter continues that law enforcement agencies are not above these rules, and such sting operations are a threat to Facebook's integrity, and its users' trust.
In a response to BuzzFeed, a Justice Department spokesman said that the DEA's case was still being reviewed, adding that as far as they know, they don't believe law enforcement agencies resort to this sort of practice frequently. In other words, the Justice Department is just going to go with the benefit of the doubt on this activity.