Nine police agencies in Washington,
including the Seattle Police Department and the Washington State
Police, launched a campaign earlier this summer called “TweetSmart”
to encourage social media users not share information about police
operations, like photos, that could compromise security. The
message from the State Patrol Chief: “Please don’t tweet about the
movements of responding police officers, or post pictures.
Sooner or later we’ll have an emergency where the suspect is
watching social media. That could allow an offender to escape, or
possibly even cost an officer their life.”
The Associated Press
talked to social media experts:
A social media expert at the International Association of Chiefs
of Police said she’s unaware of similar awareness campaigns
elsewhere but the problem that prompted the outreach is
growing.“All members of the public may not understand the implications
of tweeting out a picture of SWAT team activity,” said Nancy Korb,
who oversees the Alexandria, Virginia, organization’s Center for
Social Media.“It’s a real safety issue, not only for officers but anyone in
the vicinity,” Korb said.Korb said she is not aware of any social media post that has led
to the injury of a police officer, but she said there have been a
few close calls. Other times, tweets have interfered with
investigations.
The real world is a dynamic place. Police work means having to
deal with that, not running campaigns encouraging residents not to
exercise their First Amendment rights. Perhaps given the way
anti-gun activists and politicians have used the “advanced tech”
non-argument to whittle down the Second Amendment, some cops think
they can do the same with the First. Elizabeth Nolan Brown’s
explanation of why Twitter, and the Internet, is
not a safe space, applies to police too. The technologies
change, but the basic tension between liberty and the pursuit of
security is the same. So is the Constitution. Cops have no business
campaigning, explaining, or otherwise suggesting or directing
Americans (or non-Americans) on how to exercise free
speech.
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