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Karen Green is a Toronto mom blogger who has teamed up with a few others to start an election Twitter hashtag #momthevote. - Karen Green is a Toronto mom blogger who has teamed up with a few others to start an election Twitter hashtag #momthevote. | JENNIFER ROBERTS FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL

Karen Green is a Toronto mom blogger who has teamed up with a few others to start an election Twitter hashtag #momthevote.

Karen Green is a Toronto mom blogger who has teamed up with a few others to start an election Twitter hashtag #momthevote. - Karen Green is a Toronto mom blogger who has teamed up with a few others to start an election Twitter hashtag #momthevote. | JENNIFER ROBERTS FOR THE GLOBE AND MAIL
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Judge issues gag order for Twitter, Facebook

LONDON— Reuters

A British judge has banned Twitter users from identifying a brain-damaged woman in one of the first attempts to prevent the messaging website from revealing sensitive information.

The ruling follows the publication on Twitter on Sunday of a list of celebrities alleged to have tried to cover up sexual indiscretions by obtaining court gagging orders.

The injunction, dated May 12 and seen by Reuters on Friday, includes Twitter and Facebook in the list of media prohibited from disclosing the information.

It was issued in the Court of Protection in the case of a mother who wants to withdraw life support from her brain-damaged daughter. It prevents the identification of the woman and those caring for her. “This is among the first injunctions specifically referring to Twitter and Facebook, but there have been others banning publication on the internet,” said intellectual property and media partner Keith Arrowsmith at law firm Ralli Solicitors.

Lawyers say leaks of information protected by a British injunction on U.S.-based Twitter show that court orders to gag the press are unsustainable.

Bloggers can reveal secrets on Twitter anonymously, said member of parliament John Hemming, who is compiling a report on the strictest kind of gagging orders called ‘superinjunctions’.

“They (injunctions) depend really on people’s willingness to follow the rules rather than any ability to force it on them,” he told Reuters when asked about Twitter.

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