In this day and age you have to accept that everyting you put online is very public.
Even if the social media site you are on (like Facebook) says it si private.
Here is a perfect example why.
Police can easily get search warrants to get all your social media data.
The good news is the social media companies are trying to fight it.
You can read more about it here:
Social media companies and civil liberties organizations have joined Facebook in its fight against police investigators seeking mass search warrants on customers’ accounts.
Fishing for marlin. Teaching karate. Flying helicopters.
Such are the activities you should not participate in or at least brag about on Facebook when fraudulently collecting disability payments from the government.
But thats exactly what at least 106 New York City police officers, firefighters, and other civil servants had been doing for years, according to Manhattan district attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., who indicted the alleged fraudsters in January.
A main source of evidence in Mr. Vances case were the brazen photos the suspects placed on their Facebook profiles as well as their private messages and other personal info typically unavailable to the public. When investigators obtained a search warrant for the information from the social media site last summer, the company fought back, arguing that the search was unreasonable under the Fourth Amendment to the US Constitution.
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