
Experts divided on social media surveillance after Twitter pulls plug on Media Sonar
TORONTO — A recent controversy involving an Ontario-based software company losing access to Twitter because of its marketing practices is just one salvo in an ongoing battle around online privacy, analysts say.
Experts are divided on whether actions taken against Media Sonar of London, Ont., were justified, but are united in the view that the case highlights the elusive balance between public safety and basic privacy rights.
Media Sonar touts its social media monitoring software and algorithms as ideal tools for police and corporations to aggregate and filter data to improve safety and protect corporate assets.
But a U.S.-based investigation turned up marketing language that ran afoul of Twitter’s policies, which state that posts on the popular social network should not be mined for surveillance purposes.