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  • Seeking Alpha Under Fire

    Taking Aim at an Anonymous Blogger

    It may seem as though David Einhorn, the outspoken hedge fund manager, wants to have his cake and eat it, too. After an anonymous blogger on the website Seeking Alpha leaked one of his firm’s investments — a stake in Micron Technology — Mr. Einhorn’s firm, Greenlight Capital, asked a court to force the website to identify the writer by name. If Mr. Einhorn — a longtime champion of transparency when he singles out companies and other market participants — were to win, the result could limit the free flow of information to traditional news outlets and require sites like Seeking Alpha to not publish anonymous contributions, Andrew Ross Sorkin writes in the DealBook column.

    “The case could be a watershed for both the reporting of financial news using anonymous sources and the increasing trend of confidential information being posted anonymously on social media and the comment sections of established news websites,” Mr. Sorkin writes, adding, “In an industry whose lifeblood is information, this case underscores the struggle between secrecy and transparency.”



    Who was the leaker?

    That is what David Einhorn, the outspoken hedge fund manager, wanted to know after one of his firm’s investments was disclosed by an anonymous blogger last year.
    Mr. Einhorn was so irate about the leak of his investment — a stake in Micron Technology — that he has gone to court in hopes of unmasking the blogger.

    In a legal motion that has quietly attracted attention from various corners of Wall Street, Mr. Einhorn’s firm, Greenlight Capital, asked a court to force Seeking Alpha — the website that published the anonymous blog post — to identify the writer by name so that, as the firm argued in its legal brief, it “can sue the pseudonymous poster under his or her real name.”

    Judge Carol R. Edmead of New York State Supreme Court had ordered representatives of Seeking Alpha to appear in court on Tuesday to explain why she should not grant Greenlight’s motion, but that hearing has been postponed until April 1.

    The case could be a watershed for both the reporting of financial news using anonymous sources, and perhaps more important, the increasing trend of confidential information being posted anonymously on social media like Twitter and the comment sections of established news websites.

    Leaks to the media are a well-worn tradition on Wall Street. Yet rarely do firms go after the leakers — or the media outlets that published the leaked information — in court. It is not necessarily a criminal violation to leak confidential information, but it may be a civil violation if an individual breached a fiduciary duty or breached a specific agreement to keep certain information private.

    Journalists have traditionally been protected by state shield laws or other court protections that allow them to publish confidential information without disclosing the identity of their sources. Even when courts do get involved, many journalists are willing to go to jail rather than comply with judges’ orders.

    But what happens when the source of the information bypasses journalists or news organizations and goes directly to the public through an anonymous blog or social media? Are those individuals protected by a journalistic privilege? What if their motives go beyond mere reporting? And are courts willing to appear to limit freedom of speech rights to intervene in what is largely a commercial matter?

    While some lawyers suggest this is a First Amendment case, others say its import is in protecting trade secrets. “Laws prohibiting trade-secret misappropriation by definition restrict speech,” Eric W. Ostroff, a commercial litigation and trade secret lawyer with Meland Russin & Budwick, wrote on his blog. “Allowing someone to hide behind an online pseudonym could render these laws ineffective.”

    The author of the article disclosing Mr. Einhorn’s investment in Micron is not a journalist. The anonymous person blogs under the moniker “Valuable Insights” and is described as an “analyst and fund manager with almost 20 years’ investment experience.” The blogger also indicated that he owned shares of Micron, raising questions about possible market manipulation.

    Mr. Einhorn contended in the petition that “the only persons who lawfully possessed information regarding Greenlight’s position in Micron were persons with a contractual, fiduciary or other duty to maintain the confidentiality of Greenlight’s position: Greenlight’s employees, counsel, prime and executing brokers and other agents.”

    The number of people who could have been privy to Mr. Einhorn’s investment in Micron are many: his employees, his outside lawyers, and army of bankers and traders who helped him build the investment position.

    On Nov. 14, just after 9:30 a.m., Valuable Insights, using the stock symbol for Micron, published a short note, the equivalent of a long Twitter post, that said: “Expect one mega hedge fund rock star to show up as $MU holder today, not Ackman, Icahn or Loeb …” After a reader speculated it was Mr. Einhorn, Valuable Insights replied: “You heard it here first.”

    Shares of Micron jumped on the news that Mr. Einhorn was amassing a position. Mr. Einhorn argues that the surge in Micron’s shares made it more expensive to buy them.

    As it happens, on that same day, Mr. Einhorn was preparing a filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission seeking “confidential treatment” of the stake in Micron so that the firm would not have to publicly disclose it in its 13F filing, which details a firm’s investment stakes from the previous quarter. He filed it later the same day.

    Several weeks later, Mr. Einhorn disclosed the position himself at a Robin Hood event in which investors made contributions to charity to hear investment ideas from hedge fund managers like Mr. Einhorn.

    Mr. Einhorn is petitioning the court to force Seeking Alpha, which has several hundred bloggers who are industry insiders, many of whom publish articles and comments anonymously, to disclose the identity of Valuable Insights. Seeking Alpha, which is based in Tel Aviv, has not responded to the petition. A spokesman based in New York declined to comment, as did a spokesman for Mr. Einhorn.

    In an industry whose lifeblood is information, this case underscores the struggle between secrecy and transparency.

    If Mr. Einhorn were to prevail, the case could have a chilling effect on the free flow of information to traditional news outlets.

    But the result could force Seeking Alpha, which traffics in financial rumors and speculation for more than two million registered users, and other sites like it to change their practices, preventing anonymous contributions.

    And Mr. Einhorn, a longtime champion of transparency when he singles out companies and other market participants, may find himself at the center of a tricky balancing act.

    Andrew Ross Sorkin is the editor at large of DealBook. Twitter:@andrewrsorkin






  • #2
    Re: Seeking Alpha Under Fire

    If Mr. Einhorn were to prevail, the case could have a chilling effect on the free flow of information to traditional news outlets.
    What is the value of this information? Let's look at one aspect not mentioned in Sorkin's article. For one thing, we know that governments and other entities manipulate journalists and their readers/viewers with "information" provided by anonymous sources on a regular basis. As much as Republicans complain about the New York Times, that very useful service didn't stop during the Bush administration. Sorkin and other journalists are at risk of losing their precious scoops. Someone please refresh my memory, were the Anonymous (capital A) and Snowden leaks initially reported as being from "anonymous" sources?
    Last edited by Slimprofits; March 19, 2014, 09:46 AM.

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    • #3
      Re: Seeking Alpha Under Fire

      Judge Carol R. Edmead of New York State Supreme Court had ordered representatives of Seeking Alpha to appear in court on Tuesday to explain why she should not grant Greenlight’s motion


      The answer is that this would just result such anonymous disclosures to go underground and likely far less edited. It's not exactly rocket science to post information anonymously on the internet these days.

      Step 1. Take the bus across town to a commercial mall area with free wifi (i.e. coffee shops, small restaurants, barber shops etc)
      Step 2. Scope out the area to make sure there are no cameras, or if there are, avoid them.
      Step 3. Go to a neighbouring business with your laptop/tablet with anonymous article pre-typed.
      Step 4. Make sure your wifi device has never been used on the network before (so if you were there before, bring a different device to ensure the same MAC address isn't logged that can later be used to co-relate times/people in investigation).
      Step 5. Never use a cellphone or 3G/LTE enabled device to post from as your location & time can be easily traced. Likewise, if you use a tablet, temporarily disable GPS feature. Further, make sure no "apps" are running that are communicating to the internet for any reason (i.e. facebook, twitter, yelp, foursquare, etc) as this will result in your source IP being logged at those companies that can later be requested by authorities, even disable microsoft & anti-virus updates etc. Ideally, you have a fresh OS install with no personal identifying info on it (i.e. ensure the microsoft registration isn't to your name). This can easily be accomplished with Linux bootable USB sticks, but that's getting fancier.
      Step 6. Go to the bathroom, turn on your laptop from hibernation (15 secs), connect to wifi, post article. 2 minutes later walk out.

      For the technical saavy, if you want to get fancy... Don't use a commercial area but connect to a wifi from a residential area at 3AM using WEP breaking utils (to crack router wifi passwords), instaleld to your USB bootable OS with an altered MAC address for your wifi chip, then post article using a TOR enabled browser to a website you paid for on an Eastern European "bullet-proof hosting" provider (no US jurisdiction to take down web page/request customer info) , pay for that service with tumbled/mixed/laundered untraceable bitcoins. Using throw away emails from similar providers, "leak" the info to whatever global news agencies.

      It's a bit more trouble, but hardly a hurdle for anybody who really wants to leak the info anonymously.
      Last edited by Adeptus; March 19, 2014, 01:27 PM.
      Warning: Network Engineer talking economics!

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