Senator Elizabeth Warren to be subpoenaed by Twitter for communications with US agencies

Senator Elizabeth Warren to be subpoenaed by Twitter for communications with US agencies

WASHINGTON,⁣ July ‌20 ​(Reuters) ‍- Twitter,⁣ which ⁤has asked ⁤a court to⁤ terminate⁤ a consent⁣ order⁣ struck ‌last year with‍ the‍ Federal Trade ‌Commission (FTC) ‍related ⁣to⁤ data breaches, said in a court filing on ‍Thursday ⁤that it⁤ planned to subpoena Senator ⁤Elizabeth Warren in⁣ connection ⁢with the fight.After ⁣billionaire Elon Musk took over ⁣Twitter last year, ⁢the company laid off thousands of⁤ employees ⁤and drastically cut costs, ⁢prompting ​questions about whether it had the resources to comply ⁣with the‌ FTC ​consent order.Twitter asked last week for the consent ​order‌ to ⁤be​ scrapped, ‍accusing ​the FTC of​ bias‍ and ​overreach ​in ⁤filings in⁢ federal⁤ court‌ in San Francisco.Warren ⁣was​ one ‌of several⁢ Democratic senators ‍who had urged the​ agency⁤ to investigate Twitter’s privacy policies in the wake of the⁣ layoffs and‌ to consider enforcement ​actions against⁤ executives‌ if appropriate.The ​court‌ filing on Thursday said‌ the ‍subpoena ⁣to‍ Warren​ requested communications regarding Twitter or its owner Elon ⁤Musk‌ between her⁣ office‌ and ‌the FTC, ‍as ⁣well​ as her‍ office and ​the Securities‌ and Exchange‌ Commission.Warren’s office and the SEC did not immediately respond to ‌a⁢ request for comment. The FTC declined comment. ‌Twitter ⁢responded⁢ to a request for comment ⁣by sending a poop emoji,‍ as is its‌ standard practice.In ⁣2011, Twitter⁤ and the⁤ FTC reached the consent decree⁣ after ‍two‌ data⁢ breaches at⁤ the ⁤social media​ company, ​with ⁢Twitter agreeing at‍ the ‍time it ‌would ​not ⁢mislead users about‌ privacy ‍protections.Last year, Twitter agreed to‍ pay⁣ $150 million in ​a​ settlement with the FTC‌ and​ the Justice Department ‍to ‍resolve ​allegations that ⁢it misused private user⁤ information in ‍order to target‍ advertising.Reporting by ⁤Diane Bartz; Editing by David HolmesOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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