A conservative party tweeter who discovered a fake account of his persona (here) on Twitter got the go-ahead from the British High Court to try to serve him or her with legal papers.
“Whoever they are, they will be told to stop posting, to remove previous posts and to identify themselves to the High Court via a web link form,” Griffin Law spokesperson Andre Walker told Reuters.
This is a ever-growing problem on Twitter and recently the $1billion web service launched “Verified” accounts to help verify high profile tweeters and their tweets.
I can’t wait to see legal papers being served in relation to divorces.







