SALT LAKE CITY, Utah (May 7, 2025) – A new law took effect today in Utah banning reverse keyword searches in nearly all circumstances – marking another step in the state’s ongoing effort to block unconstitutional surveillance.
The new law prohibits police from using reverse keyword warrants to demand information about people based solely on internet search terms. This practice allows law enforcement to compel companies like Google to reveal the identities of everyone who searched for a particular word or phrase – effectively treating large numbers of innocent people as criminal suspects.
HB273, sponsored by Rep. Ryan Wilcox and Sen. Todd Weiler, builds on Utah’s 2023 law banning warrantless geofence tracking. The bill passed unanimously in both chambers – 24-0 in the Senate and 69-0 in the House – and was signed into law earlier this year. It officially went into effect today.
This is another advance in Utah’s multi-year and step-by-step approach to protect privacy and limit the surveillance state.
A MASSIVE FISHING EXPEDITION
Reverse-keyword information is defined as “information that identifies an unnamed individual, by name or other unique identifier, who electronically searched for a particular word, phrase, character string, or website, or visited a particular website through a link generated by an electronic search for a particular word, phrase, character string, or website.” For instance, police could seek a list of all the people who searched for the word “bomb” within a given area.
In effect, reverse-keyword searches are a massive fishing expedition, subjecting hundreds, if not thousands, of innocent people to police scrutiny simply for conducting an internet search.
HB273 includes exceptions to the warrant requirement in a few prescribed situations, including to locate a 911 caller in an emergency as dictated by current statute and under “a judicially recognized exception to warrant requirements.”
The law stipulates that in a reverse-keyword search warrant, “the court shall require that all electronic device data provided pursuant to the warrant be anonymized before the reverse-keyword information or reverse-location information is released to the law enforcement agency.”
Reverse keyword data will also be subject to the same retention, disclosure, and destruction requirements as geofence location data.
IMPACT ON FEDERAL SURVEILLANCE PROGRAMS
The feds can share and tap into vast amounts of surveillance information gathered at the state and local levels.
The feds provide grant money to local law enforcement agencies for a vast array of surveillance gear, including ALPRs, stingray devices, and drones, essentially encouraging and funding a giant nationwide surveillance net. It can then tap into the information via the Information Sharing Environment (ISE).
Fusion centers operate within the broader ISE. In effect, the network serves as a conduit for the sharing of information gathered by multiple agencies across the country, generally without a warrant. Known ISE partners include the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, which oversees 17 federal agencies and organizations, including the NSA.
By funding state and local surveillance programs, the feds can obtain warrantless data without having to expend the resources to collect it themselves. By restricting the collection of data at the state and local levels, legislation such as HB273 simultaneously limits the information available for the feds to access.
In a nutshell, without state and local cooperation, the feds have a much more difficult time gathering information. The passage of state laws and local ordinances banning and limiting reverse-keyword searches eliminates one avenue for gathering data. Simply put, data that doesn’t exist cannot be entered into federal databases.