The Wall Street Journal Law Blog recently had a post on social networking sites being used to determine a person’s suitability to sit on a jury. For decades we have used a traditional strategy to select a jury called voir dire. In voir dire, prospective jurors are questioned about their background and any potential biases from both attorneys in a case. Rounds of elimination ensue until a jury of twelve is reached. Since this method has worked so well, would adding technology be so horrible?
Whether you love it or hate it, social networking sites such as Facebook and Twitter have seeped into our daily lives. People check their profiles multiple times during the day. Statuses are updated on an hourly basis via one’s computer or phone. People often look up people who they have just met, or may meet in the near future, to get a sense of the individual.
Many people are objecting to the use of Facebook and Twitter by lawyers during jury selection because they claim it is an invasion of their privacy. However, if privacy is defined as being able to seclude oneself from public view, merely joining Facebook and Twitter allows others to invade our privacy. By joining these sites, a person allows their information to be online, available to others.
Now of course, there are privacy settings, but people have found ways around them; hence the constant updates to the privacy policies of these sites. Therefore, a person cannot accuse another of invading their privacy when they themselves have made their information public.
Rather than a random person reading your profile, a lawyer may do so to get a sense about you. However, the lawyer is not invading your privacy because you voluntarily put the information out there. Since Facebook and Twitter have made us all accessible to anyone and everyone all over the world, it is unreasonable for us to believe that we can control how our information is being used. Rather than complain about these uses, we need to remind ourselves that social networking sites carry with them the price of sacrificing some of our privacy.