I don't really know what a state AG can do though. Best case is an injunction. But then someone would have to rat on the feds that they are violating the injunction.
It seems to me that it is ripe for a civil rights suit against the feds who were delivering unlawful censoring orders. Some of the bigger names that we have seen in the releases have all they need to go nuts with. And in those suits they might be able to get more info.
And in light of that info, and perhaps maybe even twitter being willing to play ball, a plaintiff might be able to subpoena that information from twitter directly without having to get a court involved. Then you'd have everything you needed to file suit.
I don't really know what a state AG can do though. Best case is an injunction. But then someone would have to rat on the feds that they are violating the injunction.
It seems to me that it is ripe for a civil rights suit against the feds who were delivering unlawful censoring orders. Some of the bigger names that we have seen in the releases have all they need to go nuts with. And in those suits they might be able to get more info.
And in light of that info, and perhaps maybe even twitter being willing to play ball, a plaintiff might be able to subpoena that information from twitter directly without having to get a court involved. Then you'd have everything you needed to file suit.