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Twitter emails are asking users to remove tweets that do not comply with the law.
Twitter emails are asking users to remove tweets that do not comply with the law. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
Twitter emails are asking users to remove tweets that do not comply with the law. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

'Celebrity threesome': Twitter warns against illegal tweets

This article is more than 8 years old

Privacy injunction stopping press naming celebrity followed by Twitter law cautions

People using Twitter to name the “celebrity threesome” couple have had emails warning them of legal complaints, just hours after the supreme court upheld a privacy injunction against the UK press on Thursday.

An email from Twitter’s legal team, seen by the Guardian, does not explicitly ask users to delete the tweets but hints that there could be consequences for not doing so.

The email reads: “The complainant requests that the following tweet, allegedly in violation of local law in the UK, be removed immediately from your account. Please confirm whether you will voluntarily comply with the request.”

It also includes a reminder that Twitter’s rules require that users “comply with all local laws regarding their online conduct and acceptable content”.

Though Twitter will pass on legal notices, and remove content that breaches its rules, the number of other people tweeting about the emails at the same time, late on Thursday, indicated a concerted effort to get the tweets removed following this the supreme court ruling.

The injunction, which prevents press in England and Wales from naming the couple in relation to a story about a “threesome” one of them had with another couple, will remain in place until at least the culmination of a full privacy trial scheduled for this year.

The majority ruling rejected arguments that the publication of the names both on social media and in foreign press rendered the injunction unworkable.

Lawyers acting on behalf of the celebrity couple have reportedly secured the services of the online reputation management firm Web Sheriff, which last month began filing takedown notices against sites including Facebook, Mumsnet and Google.

In April the search engine began removing links to articles that named either of the pair, posting a notice saying they had been removed because they were subject to a legal complaint.

Twitter would not comment on Thursday.

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