Americans spend an estimated 20 percent of their free time on social media sites. Posting photographs, status updates, travel logs, streams of consciousness, rants and all manner of things online to enable friends and family to peer into one’s life has become commonplace.
But what if the person doing the peering is not a friend or family member? What if he or she is an attorney (or private investigator) seeking to scour an adverse litigant’s social media pages for damaging information or photos?
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