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1 minute read
Be careful what you say
A SOCIAL media account is less private than people assume, the UK’s Telegraph revealed.
As Ukip founder Nigel Farage discovered when Coutts closed his account, high street banks monitor customers’ social media after incorporating this right in their privacy policies.
Exclusive Coutts, banker to royals, celebrities and the wealthy, now belongs to NatWest. Thirty nine per cent publiclyowned following a 2008 bailout, the bank maintained that it closed Brexiteer Farage’s account as his views “do not align with our values.”
A dossier compiled by the bank justified this stance by including examples of his Twitter posts.
Farage also wants an apology from the BBC for unfounded reports that his account was closed for commercial reasons. These appeared the day after its business editor sat next to Dame Alison Rose, NatWest’s chief executive, implying that Rose had passed on details of Farage’s financial situation.
The same Telegraph article revealed that the Treasury is examining three more banksMetro Bank,Yorkshire Building Society and American Express which appear to have closed customers’ accounts owing to their political views.
The Telegraph disclosed that the ‘specifics’ of the cases now under review have not been made public, although both Reform UK