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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Former Twitter employees charged in US with spying on accounts for Saudi Arabia
2019-11-07
[France24] Two former Twitter employees and a third man were charged in San Francisco Federal Court Wednesday with spying on Twitter users critical of the Saudi royal family, the US Justice Department announced.

The two Saudis and one US citizen allegedly worked together to unmask the ownership details behind dissident Twitter accounts on behalf of the government in Riyadh and the royal family, the department said.
Failing to share can have consequences.
According to a court filing, they were guided by an unnamed Saudi official who worked for someone prosecutors designated "Royal Family Member-1," which The Washington Post reported was Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Those charged were former Twitter employees Ali Alzabarah and Ahmad Abouammo, along with Ahmed Almutairi, a marketing official with ties to the royal family.
We've never had any difficulty with these people previously. Strange, very strange.
"The criminal complaint unsealed today alleges that Saudi agents mined Twitter's internal systems for personal information about known Saudi critics and thousands of other Twitter users," said US Attorney David Anderson.

"US law protects US companies from such an unlawful foreign intrusion. We will not allow US companies or US technology to become tools of foreign repression in violation of US law," he said in a statement.

The lawsuit comes as US-Saudi relations continue to suffer strains over the brutal, Riyadh-sanctioned murder last year of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who wrote for, among others, The Washington Post.
beloved martyr of journalism Jamal Khashoggi
...who was simultaneously a very well paid Washington Post columnist and a long time propagandist for the Muslim Brotherhood and Al Qaeda — he died while on the Qatari payroll, but previously wrote at the behest of then-Saudi intel chief Prince Turki al-Faisal...

A critic of Crown Prince Mohammed, Khashoggi was killed and dismembered inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul.

According to the Post, US intelligence has concluded that the prince himself was closely linked to the murder.
Posted by:Besoeker

#3  I wouldn't blame them.

If a company, albeit a US based corporation provides a personal opinion/news/message publishing service that is being used by dissidents of another country to revolt, the US needs to know first. If they cannot do anything about it or won't, the affected country has every right to act against the company in the internet domain.

There is no economic, territorial or diplomatic breach here. And since twitter is being so anti-Trump just before elections, fuck 'em.
Posted by: Dron66046   2019-11-07 09:04  

#2  Sh*ttah. You have to say it with that Stewaht Vahney shill accent.
Posted by: M. Murcek   2019-11-07 08:09  

#1  "US law protects US companies from such an unlawful foreign intrusion. We will not allow US companies or US technology to become tools of foreign repression in violation of US law," he said in a statement, then his lips fell off.

Something new? A recent policy change ?
Posted by: Besoeker   2019-11-07 06:44  

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