Saudi Arabia reportedly asked Twitter employee to spy on dissidents

Twitter fired him in 2015.



Saudi Arabia may have done more than use large-scale social media
campaigns to stifle political opposition. New York Times sources claim
the country was "grooming" a Twitter engineer, Ali Alzabarah, to snoop
on the accounts of dissidents and other targets. Western officials
reportedly warned Twitter in late 2015 that Alzabarah had not only grown
close to Saudi intelligence agents, but had agreed to spy on multiple
user accounts. The social network suspended him and conducted an
investigation that turned up no evidence of handing data to the Saudis,
but they fired him all the same in December the same year.



Twitter sent safety alerts to dozens of the accounts Alzabarah had
checked, some of which either fostered activism or might have been
critical of the Saudi regime. The mix included policy academics,
journalists and experts on security and surveillance, including people
involved in the Tor Project and its activist-friendly anonymizing
network.



Don't expect confirmations. Twitter has declined to comment, while
neither Alzabarah (who now works for the Saudi government) nor the
kingdom had responded as of October 20th.



If accurate, the scoop suggests not only that Saudi Arabia has been
determined to control its online political discourse at all costs, but
that Twitter didn't have checks to make sure that employees were
accessing accounts for the right reasons. Not that this is a unique
issue if so -- Facebook recently fired a worker who allegedly abused his
position to stalk women. Unless there are tight controls on data,
there's a chance (however slim) that employees will misuse their power.

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