Skip to content
VistoaGuestSign in to save
HomeTopicsSearchSavedMe
Now trendingCoverage GapsMethodologySettingsHelp

DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian's Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts

1 articles / 1 outlets / spread 0.00

DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian's Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts
justice4 hr agoCoverage Gap

DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian's Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts

Full coverage view across outlets, lean, source quality, and framing. Compare framing without algorithmic ranking.

1 articles1 outletsSpread 0.000 claims
Coverage Gap Analysis
  • Home
  • Search
  • Saved
  • Me
source

See what the current coverage may be missing.

The story has meaningful coverage, but the source mix is thinner than expected. Broader source coverage is still thin.

Broader source coverage is still thin.
Few medium or high-quality sources are covering this yet.
Few local sources are represented.

Confidence

25%

Gap score

0/100

Sources

1

Usual mix

Private

View Coverage MapAdd Source

From the Left

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

From the Center

1 outlet
  • Wired·May 4

    DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian's Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts

    The Department of Homeland Security tried to obtain a Canadian man’s location information, activity logs, and other identifying information from Google after he criticized the Trump administration online following the killings of Renee Good and Alex Pretti by federal immigration agents in Minneapolis early this year.Lawyers for the man, who has not been named, are alarmed in part because they say that the man has not entered the United States in more than a decade. “I don’t know what the government knows about our client’s residence, but it’s clear that the government isn’t stopping to find out,” says Michael Perloff, a senior staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union of the District of Columbia who is representing the man in a lawsuit against Markwayne Mullin, the secretary of DHS, over the summons. The lawsuit alleges that DHS violated the customs law that gives the agency the power to request records from businesses and other parties.Perloff argues that the government is using the fact that big tech companies are based in the US to request information it would not otherwise be able to get. “It’s using that geographic fact to get information that otherwise would be totally outside of its

From the Right

0 outlets

No coverage from this perspective yet.

Claim synthesis

Pro users see canonical claims across the cluster and which outlets reported each one.

Learn more

Outlets covering this story

Wired

First seen

May 4, 2026

Latest

May 4, 2026

Outlets

1

Diversity

100/100