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The Courts

Emoji Are Showing Up in Court Cases Exponentially, and Courts Aren't Prepared (theverge.com) 118

An anonymous reader shares a report: Bay Area prosecutors were trying to prove that a man arrested during a prostitution sting was guilty of pimping charges, and among the evidence was a series of Instagram DMs (direct messages) he'd allegedly sent to a woman. One read: "Teamwork make the dream work" with high heels and money bag emoji placed at the end. Prosecutors said the message implied a working relationship between the two of them. The defendant said it could mean he was trying to strike up a romantic relationship. Who was right?

Emoji are showing up as evidence in court more frequently with each passing year. Between 2004 and 2019, there was an exponential rise in emoji and emoticon references in US court opinions, with over 30 percent of all cases appearing in 2018, according to Santa Clara University law professor Eric Goldman, who has been tracking all of the references to "emoji" and "emoticon" that show up in US court opinions. So far, the emoji and emoticons have rarely been important enough to sway the direction of a case, but as they become more common, the ambiguity in how emoji are displayed and what we interpret emoji to mean could become a larger issue for courts to contend with.

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Emoji Are Showing Up in Court Cases Exponentially, and Courts Aren't Prepared

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  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @07:19AM (#58144092)
    Whoa, whoa, stop right there. Is "emoji" also the plural of "emoji"?
  • Do that with emojis too.

    "The defendant looked at her like the surprised Pikachu meme." "Lawyers to the bench, now!"

    • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @09:42AM (#58144522)

      I think the problem is that emojis are even more ambiguous because the images may be very context sensitive. The High Heals and Dollar signs. Is that asking for money for shoes, asking someone to dress up and bring some extra cash, or a sign for prostitution.

      • An emoji is nothing more than an extension of a poorly written paragraph. Its ambiguity stems from you reading it in isolation.

        In this case it's ambiguity also stems from the preceding sentence: "Teamwork make the dream work" which contains precisely zero information to make any judgement on the topic at hand. The emoji isn't the problem here.

  • could it be (Score:4, Insightful)

    by renegade600 ( 204461 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @07:31AM (#58144126)

    could it be?? Is the world slowly returning to hieroglyphs??

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      No. For most of history people have been largely illiterate peasants. We're returning to the historical norm.
      20th century was a weird outlier in practically every way.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      You see this happening whenever there are multiple languages in use in the same place. US highway signs used to say MERGING TRAFFIC. Now they use a graphic which is essentially a kanji, eliminating the need to add Spanish to all the signs.

      • When I was a kid learning to read (and perhaps needing glasses), I used to read that as "MORNING TRAFFIC". I observed a while and couldn't see any point to it and finally asked an adult.

    • could it be?? Is the world slowly returning to hieroglyphs??

      Ha! My first thought.

    • Re:could it be (Score:5, Interesting)

      by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @09:54AM (#58144562)

      No, the hieroglyphs were a form of direct language. The Emoji is actually more like a form of punctuation. If you look at President Lincoln's hand written speeches, he notated them with little pictures, letting him know when to look at the audience and where. How to inflect his voice, and what emotions to show.

      Much of this informal communication was lost when we moved over to typed documents, this was due to a limited number characters available for a type writer, and printing presses, then to limited the character set in computers to 8 bits or less, due to expense and technical limitations (large and overly complex keyboard).

      Now with modern technology with 64bit microprocessors, Gigs of RAM, and video that handles 32bit color at an insane resolution in nearly everyone's pockets. And with a gesture based interface, that doesn't require a physical keyboard. The Emoji is back into our language in a new form.

       

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by sad_ ( 7868 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @07:34AM (#58144128) Homepage

    you can make it to mean whatever you want it to mean.
    the emoji's have their 'official' meaning, but that can change depending on its use (create a movie title only using emoji, etc).
    or you could create a secret code book made out of emoji characters and then only other people having the code book will be able to 'read' your text.

    it's basically impossible to prove a series of emoji's mean anything.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      or you could create a secret code book made out of emoji characters and then only other people having the code book will be able to 'read' your text.

      OK, this one is true for any set of symbols.

      You can create a secret code book made out of the alphabet and then only other people having the code book will be able to 'read' your text. (Actually looked at a couple of military code books that were like that.)

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @07:55AM (#58144188) Homepage Journal

      The issue here is that prosecutors haven't figured out how weak emoji evidence is yet. They are treating it like other written evidence, when it is in fact far more open to interpretation.

      We have no details of the alleged pimping case, but you would hope that they were not relying too heavily on some emoji to get the conviction.

      • Another message from the defendant included the crown emoji, which was said to signify that the “pimp is the king.” Ultimately, the ruling didn’t hinge on the interpretation of emoji, but they still provided evidentiary support.

        I think we have some details :) ;) :squirrel:

    • by kurkosdr ( 2378710 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @08:05AM (#58144218)
      Not to mention emojis render differently on different platforms or versions of platforms. If I send an icon of a water pistol from a new phone it might appear as a gun on an older phone. Did I just made a death threat? The emoji name is actually "gun" but many platforms render it as a water pistol in their latest versions because public relations by vendors. As other people mentioned, the English language is getting cryptic and pictographic. Someone should try putting emojis in an EULA, let's see how they interpret this (this should show the pitfalls of using freeform text on contracts)
      • You are absolutely (blob). (blob) (blob) (blob). (blob) (blob) (blob) (blob) !!!
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        render it as a water pistol in their latest versions because public relations

        Try sending that to the Wicked Witch of the West.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        In our local court, if you are using any emoji, other than faces, you have to include pictures of what the emoji looks like on both the sending and the receiving devices (if known what kind they are), and a basic description of what they mean. Since then, almost every case includes archived copies of emojipedia and another emoji resource.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        As soon as you mentioned emojis in a EULA, I thought of the tears of laughter emoji. I'd show you but this is /.

    • you can make it to mean whatever you want it to mean. the emoji's have their 'official' meaning, but that can change depending on its use (create a movie title only using emoji, etc). or you could create a secret code book made out of emoji characters and then only other people having the code book will be able to 'read' your text.

      it's basically impossible to prove a series of emoji's mean anything.

      I don't think that's really true. Try this:

      you can make it to mean whatever you want it to mean. the words have their 'official' meaning, but that can change depending on its use (create a movie title only using words, etc). or you could create a secret code book made out of words and then only other people having the code book will be able to 'read' your text.

      it's basically impossible to prove a series of words mean anything.

      Any text can be used in usual ways. Words have multiple meanings, their meanings change over time, there is slang, context, codes, etc.

      That doesn't mean that text has no meaning. It just means that someone may have to prove (to a jury, to police, to the public, etc.) that they were using it in unusual ways.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        The difference is that use of emojis is recent enough that we don't have long established USUAL ways to use them. There's no baseline.

    • by sjames ( 1099 )

      It gets even more ambiguous when different devices have different depictions. On some devices, the gun emoji looks like a water pistol, on others like a real gun. So is the sender invoking violence or slapstick?

  • No need to encrypt everything, just "encode" everything in word that appear to have no connection or are hard if not impossible to interpret.

    Government (and corporate) spying are here to stay, so make it hard on them at least...

  • If your case depends in any significant way on interpreting the intent of an emoji then (near as makes no difference) you have no objectively useful evidence.

  • Emojis in passwords (Score:4, Interesting)

    by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @08:10AM (#58144232)

    This week I had to create an account on an US government website to process some forms. I was surprised to see that as a part of the password recommendations they said that you could use emojis. This was the first time that I have encountered such a clause and it was doubly surprising that it was on a US government website.

    I stuck to a regular plain old string of random characters and digits, but I could see how people who think in emoji could prefer an emoji password.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      Latest advice from NIST is that password complexity requirements shouldn't be allowed. People find it hard to make a password that meets them and that's memorable at the same time. So they generally aren't secure enough ("nameofpet123"), get reused, or even written down on post-it notes.

      Emojis are just data. Since it should be hashed it shouldn't really matter what character set you're using. Security comes from password length not enforcing other complexity rules.

      Password managers are the best way to get p

      • by OzPeter ( 195038 )

        Password managers are the best way to get people to use extremely long passwords and avoid password reuse since they no longer need to remember them (NIST advice).

        Where do you think my password, the 5 security questions/answers and the special reset code that is generated when the account is created all ended up?

        OTOH there is now a fight between convenience and security in using the master password to open up my password manager. So now I have all my eggs in one basket controlled by a single password.

        • True, but you can protect that basket a lot more efficiently than dozens of separate passwords. Use a key-file as well as a password for added security. Store your more sensitive passwords in a separate PM on a flash drive that you only plug in when you need them, secured by a keyfile on your computer so that an attacker will need access to both to get at your stored passwords.

          It still won't protect you from a competent, targeted attack - but there's not really much you can do against those anyway, unless

    • This week I had to create an account on an US government website to process some forms. I was surprised to see that as a part of the password recommendations they said that you could use emojis.

      That's all well and good until you need to log into the website from a computer keyboard and can't log in because you can't type an emoji (and besides using some trick most computer users don't know).

      • How does *anyone* enter those funny blobs? Do folks have hidden 3,000-key keyboards hidden in their basements?
        • How does *anyone* enter those funny blobs? Do folks have hidden 3,000-key keyboards hidden in their basements?

          In windows 10 you can right click on the task bar and choose a "touch keyboard" and emojis are available from that. (but most people don't know that trick).

    • by GuB-42 ( 2483988 )

      Any Unicode string should be accepted as a password. It includes emoji and any piece of weirdness Unicode has to offer.
      The only thing is that the string should be normalized first, this is because there are cases where the same character can have different representations: for example, é can be represented both as a single code point or something like e combined with '.

  • Just put anyone that uses emojis in gaol and throw away the key. Everyone's a winner.

  • McNulty. What the fuck did I do?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Now I can finally get my perl6 job

    Thanks unicode support

  • by Anonymous Coward

    How is this different from the spoken word, ordinary text or even txt spk?

    It is the Juries job to interpret evidence, I don't see this as a big challenge for the courts to contend with.

    • It is the Juries job to interpret evidence, I don't see this as a big challenge for the courts to contend with.

      To state the obvious: the judge decides what evidence is allowed to be presented to the jury. If emojis are considered either prejudicial, irrelevant, or ambiguous, the jury won't see them.

  • Emoji can substitute for complex ideas in a concise form. Some words do that.

    Emoji can express a simple idea and also convey emotion. The right word can do that.

    Emoji can express intentional ambiguity. Words also.

    I don't doubt that there's more brevity, emotion, ambiguity and/or context dependence with emojis, which is why they are used instead of words some of the time, but the problem in terms of evidence admissible in court isn't new.

    What's different is that all emoji are new, and there isn't the same

  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Tuesday February 19, 2019 @10:02AM (#58144594)

    Tone and inflection are nearly everything. Without them you are very nearly having a conversation with an imaginary character in your mind combined with your own mannerisms and bias. These things are already extremely ambiguous. I don't really see that emoji is worse.

  • In general, both the legal system and legislative record suffer from a really stupid attachment to testimony being recorded in long form prose only.

    Just think of all those congressional records and court transcripts / decisions with numbered lines and "whereas", "notwithstanding subsection 1)b)IV.." and "15% of the subtotal of appropriations designated..." or "a line defined by the coordinates 42d23'11"N, 73d45'04"W to the point 44d..."

    So many words (and minds) would be clarified by the ability to sh
  • Can anyone truly be prepared for an emoji?
  • (sad face)

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