Remember that Wal-Mart security worker who blew the whistle on their creepily extensive spying operations?
Well, Wal-Mart has struck back:
Wal-Mart won a gag order to stop a fired security operative from talking to reporters, and a judge ordered him to provide Wal-Mart attorneys with "the names of all persons to whom he has transmitted, since Jan. 15, 2007, any Wal-Mart information." ...
The restraining order suggests that Mr. Gabbard, 44, might have Wal-Mart equipment or documents.
It orders him to surrender any documents or data and a long list of "all home and work computers, personal digital assistants, hard drives, thumb drives, and all other electronic or digital media and hardcopy information."
It also orders Mr. Gabbard, at Wal-Mart's request, to provide lawyers with the names of people whom he has provided information about the company.
