Internet service providers must turn over customer e-mails and other digital content sought by US government search warrants even when the information is stored overseas, a US federal judge ruled on Friday.
In what appears to be the first court decision addressing the issue, US Magistrate Judge James Francis in New York said Internet service providers such as Microsoft Corp or Google Inc cannot refuse to turn over customer information and e-mails stored in other countries when issued a valid search warrant from US law enforcement agencies.
BURDEN
If US agencies were required to coordinate efforts with foreign governments to secure such information, Francis said: “The burden on the government would be substantial, and law enforcement efforts would be seriously impeded.”
The ruling underscores the debate over privacy and technology that has intensified since the disclosures by former US National Security Agency (NSA) contractor Edward Snowden about secret US government efforts to collect huge amounts of consumer data around the world.
“It showcases an increasing trend that data can be anywhere,” said Orin Kerr, a law professor at George Washington University who studies computer crime law.
The decision addressed a search warrant served on Microsoft for one of its customers whose e-mails are stored on a server in Dublin, Ireland.
In a statement, Microsoft said it challenged the warrant because the US government should not be able to search the content of e-mail held overseas.
“A US prosecutor cannot obtain a US warrant to search someone’s home located in another country, just as another country’s prosecutor cannot obtain a court order in her home country to conduct a search in the United States,” the company said. “We think the same rules should apply in the online world, but the government disagrees.”
REVIEW
The company plans to seek review of Francis’ decision from a US federal district judge.
Microsoft has recently emphasized to its customers abroad that their data should not be searchable by US authorities and said it would fight such requests.
In a company blog post in December last year, Microsoft general-counsel Brad Smith said it would “assert available jurisdictional objections to legal demands when governments seek this type of customer content that is stored in another country.”
The search warrant in question was approved by Francis in December last year and sought information associated with an e-mail account for a Microsoft customer, including the customer’s name, contents of all e-mails received and sent by the account, online session times and durations and any credit card number or bank account used for payment.
It is unclear which agency issued the warrant, and it and all related documents remain under seal.
Microsoft determined that the target account is hosted on a server in Dublin and asked Francis to throw out the request, citing US law that search warrants do not extend overseas.
Francis agreed that this is true for “traditional” search warrants, but not warrants seeking digital content, which are governed by a US federal law called the Stored Communications Act.
‘HYBRID’
A search warrant for e-mail information is a “hybrid” order: obtained like a search warrant, but executed like a subpoena for documents, he said.
A longstanding US law holds that the recipient of a subpoena must provide the information sought, no matter where it is held, he said.
OpenAI has warned US lawmakers that its Chinese rival DeepSeek (深度求索) is using unfair and increasingly sophisticated methods to extract results from leading US artificial intelligence (AI) models to train the next generation of its breakthrough R1 chatbot, a memo reviewed by Bloomberg News showed. In the memo, sent on Thursday to the US House of Representatives Select Committee on China, OpenAI said that DeepSeek had used so-called distillation techniques as part of “ongoing efforts to free-ride on the capabilities developed by OpenAI and other US frontier labs.” The company said it had detected “new, obfuscated methods” designed to evade OpenAI’s defenses
NEW IMPORTS: Car dealer PG Union Corp said it would consider introducing US-made models such as the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Stellantis’ RAM 1500 to Taiwan Tesla Taiwan yesterday said that it does not plan to cut its car prices in the wake of Washington and Taipei signing the Agreement on Reciprocal Trade on Thursday to eliminate tariffs on US-made cars. On the other hand, Mercedes-Benz Taiwan said it is planning to lower the price of its five models imported from the US after the zero tariff comes into effect. Tesla in a statement said it has no plan to adjust the prices of the US-made Model 3, Model S and Model X as tariffs are not the only factor the automaker uses to determine pricing policies. Tesla said
China’s top chipmaker has warned that breakaway spending on artificial intelligence (AI) chips is bringing forward years of future demand, raising the risk that some data centers could sit idle. “Companies would love to build 10 years’ worth of data center capacity within one or two years,” Semiconductor Manufacturing International Corp (SMIC, 中芯) cochief executive officer Zhao Haijun (趙海軍) said yesterday on a call with analysts. “As for what exactly these data centers will do, that hasn’t been fully thought through.” Moody’s Ratings projects that AI-related infrastructure investment would exceed US$3 trillion over the next five years, as developers pour eye-watering sums
Australian singer Kylie Minogue says “nothing compares” to performing live, but becoming an international wine magnate in under six years has been quite a thrill for the Spinning Around star. Minogue launched her first own-label wine in 2020 in partnership with celebrity drinks expert Paul Schaafsma, starting with a basic rose but quickly expanding to include sparkling, no-alcohol and premium rose offerings. The actress and singer has since wracked up sales of around 25 million bottles, with her carefully branded products pitched at low-to mid-range prices in dozens of countries. Britain, Australia and the United States are the biggest markets. “Nothing compares to performing