Elon Musk's X is urging the Supreme Court to shield companies from being forced to disclose sensitive user financial data under "suspicionless" subpoenas issued by federal law enforcement agencies.
The social media platform owned by the world's richest person asked the justices to revisit a lower-court ruling allowing the Internal Revenue Service to enforce a subpoena for a Coinbase customer's transaction records in a tax probe aimed at more than 14,000 users of the cryptocurrency exchange.
Lawyers for X, which says it stores subscription and advertising data and eventually plans to offer users financial services, argued in a
The attorneys said that taking up the IRS case would give the court an opportunity to "re-establish the proper relationship between government and companies like Coinbase and X Corp., who would no longer be extrajudicially coerced into helping the government violate their users' Fourth Amendment rights."
Musk, who calls himself a free-speech absolutist, has petitioned the high court in the past to limit how much the government can force social media platforms to cooperate in law enforcement investigations.
Last May, X
An X spokesperson declined to comment beyond the filing.
The filing was reported earlier by the Financial Times.