Ostergren v. Cuccinelli ( 2010 )


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  •                                               Filed:    August 2, 2010
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 09-1723(L)
    (3:08-cv-00362-REP)
    BETTY J. OSTERGREN,
    Plaintiff - Appellee,
    v.
    KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II, in      his    official     capacity   as
    Attorney General of Virginia,
    Defendant – Appellant.
    -------------------------------------
    ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION CENTER,
    Amicus Supporting Appellee.
    O R D E R
    The court amends its opinion filed July 26, 2010, as
    follows:
    On page 15, line 2 of footnote 9 – the spelling of the
    name “Chaplinsky” is corrected.
    For the Court – By Direction
    /s/ Patricia S. Connor
    Clerk
    PUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    BETTY J. OSTERGREN,                      
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II, in his
    official capacity as Attorney
    General of Virginia,                        No. 09-1723
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION
    CENTER,
    Amicus Supporting Appellee.
    
    BETTY J. OSTERGREN,                      
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    KENNETH T. CUCCINELLI, II, in his
    official capacity as Attorney
    General of Virginia,                        No. 09-1796
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION
    CENTER,
    Amicus Supporting Appellant.
    
    2                   OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    Appeals from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Virginia, at Richmond.
    Robert E. Payne, Senior District Judge.
    (3:08-cv-00362-REP)
    Argued: March 23, 2010
    Decided: July 26, 2010
    Before DUNCAN and DAVIS, Circuit Judges, and
    Joseph R. GOODWIN, Chief United States District Judge
    for the Southern District of West Virginia,
    sitting by designation.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded by published
    opinion. Judge Duncan wrote the opinion, in which Judge
    Davis and Judge Goodwin concurred. Judge Davis wrote a
    separate concurring opinion.
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Earle Duncan Getchell, Jr., OFFICE OF THE
    ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Vir-
    ginia, for Appellant/Cross-Appellee. Rebecca Kim Glenberg,
    AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION
    OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee/Cross-
    Appellant. ON BRIEF: William C. Mims, Attorney General
    of Virginia, Stephen R. McCullough, State Solicitor General,
    William E. Thro, Special Counsel, Martin L. Kent, Chief
    Deputy Attorney General, Stephen M. Hall, Assistant Attor-
    ney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF
    VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellant/Cross-
    Appellee. Frank M. Feibelman, Cooperating Attorney, ACLU
    OF VIRGINIA, Richmond, Virginia, for Appellee/Cross-
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                    3
    Appellant. Marc Rotenberg, John Verdi, Jared Kaprove, Mat-
    thew Phillips, ELECTRONIC PRIVACY INFORMATION
    CENTER, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Supporting
    Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
    OPINION
    DUNCAN, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal arises from a First Amendment challenge to
    Virginia’s Personal Information Privacy Act, Va. Code
    §§ 59.1-442 to -444. Section 59.1-443.2 prohibits
    "[i]ntentionally communicat[ing] another individual’s social
    security number to the general public." The district court
    found this section unconstitutional as applied to an advocacy
    website that criticized Virginia’s release of private informa-
    tion and showed publicly available Virginia land records con-
    taining unredacted Social Security numbers ("SSNs").
    Ostergren v. McDonnell , No. 08-362, 
    2008 WL 3895593
    , at
    *14 (E.D. Va. Aug. 22, 2008). Later, the court entered a per-
    manent injunction barring Virginia from punishing the repub-
    lication of "publicly obtainable documents containing
    unredacted SSNs of Virginia legislators, Virginia Executive
    Officers or Clerks of Court as part as [sic] an effort to reform
    Virginia law and practice respecting the publication of SSNs
    online." Ostergren v. McDonnell , 
    643 F. Supp. 2d 758
    , 770
    (E.D. Va. 2009). Both decisions are challenged on appeal. For
    the reasons that follow, we affirm in part and reverse in part.
    I.
    Betty Ostergren resides in Hanover County, Virginia, and
    advocates for information privacy across the country. Calling
    attention to Virginia’s practice of placing land records on the
    Internet without first redacting SSNs, she displayed copies of
    Virginia land records containing unredacted SSNs on her
    4                      OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    website. After section 59.1-443.2 was amended to prohibit
    this practice, but before the amendment took effect in July
    2008, Ostergren brought this constitutional challenge.1
    A.
    The clerk of court for each county in Virginia maintains
    documents affecting real property within the county. These
    "land records" reflect the ownership, conveyance, encum-
    brance, or financing of real property.2 They include deeds,
    contracts, liens, divorce decrees, and various other docu-
    ments. See Va. Code § 17.1-227. Virginia law requires that
    clerks make land records available for public inspection. See
    Va. Code § 17.1-208. Any person can review and copy land
    records by visiting the courthouse and requesting them.
    During the 1990s, many clerks of court began placing land
    records on the Internet. According to counsel for the Attorney
    General, the impetus came mainly from the real estate indus-
    try because online access to land records facilitated numerous
    real estate transactions. The Virginia General Assembly
    encouraged this practice by allowing clerks to charge a fee for
    online access. See Va. Code § 17.1-276. The General Assem-
    bly later established a "Technology Trust Fund Fee" assessed
    for every document recorded, and set aside the revenue for
    1
    We provide factual background primarily through July 2008. Regard-
    ing the district court’s decision finding section 59.1-443.2 unconstitu-
    tional, we cannot consider later factual developments because the record
    below did not extend beyond July 2008. See Kirkpatrick v. Lenoir County
    Bd. of Educ. , 
    216 F.3d 380
    , 384 (4th Cir. 2000) ("From a procedural
    standpoint, courts hearing a case on appeal are limited to reviewing the
    record that has been developed below."). Regarding injunctive relief, we
    could theoretically have considered factual background through June
    2009, but the record below contains little evidence about factual develop-
    ments after July 2008.
    2
    Virginia law states that "‘[l]and records’ means any writing authorized
    by law to be recorded on paper or in electronic format that the clerk
    records affecting title to real property . . . ." Va. Code § 17.1-292(B).
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                    5
    improving access to public records through information tech-
    nology. See Va. Code § 17.1-279. The General Assembly also
    declared "the intent . . . that all circuit court clerks provide
    secure remote access to land records on or before July 1,
    2006." 2004 Va. Acts 980. Finally, in 2007, the General
    Assembly imposed guidelines for posting land records online,
    see Va. Code § 17.1-294, and required that "[e]very circuit
    court clerk shall provide secure remote access to land records
    . . . on or before July 1, 2008," Va. Code § 17.1-279(D)(3).
    The parties stipulated that "[u]nder Virginia’s ‘secure
    remote access’ system, any person may, for a nominal fee,
    obtain online access to all of the land records for a given
    locality." J.A. 86. Guidelines require that an individual must
    register and obtain a username and password before using the
    system. See Information Technology Resource Management
    Standard, SEC503-02 §§ 1.4(3), 2.1 (Va. Info. Techs. Agency
    Mar. 28, 2005). This involves signing an agreement, paying
    a fee (possibly several hundred dollars per year), and provid-
    ing certain personal information (first and last names, busi-
    ness name, mailing address, telephone number, email address,
    and citizenship status). 
    Id. § 2.1.1.
    "Registration must be in
    person or by means of a notarized or otherwise sworn applica-
    tion that establishes the prospective Subscriber’s identity,
    business or residence address, and citizenship status." 
    Id. § 2.1.2.
    By July 2008, every county in Virginia had made its land
    records available on the Internet through secure remote
    access. This included over 200 million Virginia land records.
    B.
    Virginia’s decision to place land records online raised cer-
    tain concerns about information privacy. For many decades,
    attorneys included SSNs on real estate documents submitted
    for recording. Initially assigned for the purpose of administer-
    ing Social Security laws, nine-digit SSNs have become
    6                   OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    widely used for identification and account authentication by
    government agencies and private organizations because no
    two people have the same number. They are thus highly sus-
    ceptible to misuse. An unscrupulous individual who knows
    another’s SSN could, for example, obtain fraudulent credit
    cards or order new checks on that person’s account.
    When clerks of court began placing land records online,
    they did nothing to redact SSNs. At that time, Virginia law
    neither required such redaction nor prevented attorneys from
    submitting documents for recording that contained unredacted
    SSNs. In 2003 and 2004, however, the General Assembly pro-
    vided that "clerk[s] may refuse to accept any instrument sub-
    mitted for recordation that includes a grantor’s, grantee’s or
    trustee’s social security number," and clarified that "the attor-
    ney or party who prepares or submits the instrument has
    responsibility for ensuring that the social security number is
    removed from the instrument prior to the instrument being
    submitted for recordation." Va. Code § 17.1-227. Virginia law
    also provides that clerks "shall be immune from suit arising
    from any acts or omissions relating to providing secure
    remote access to land records pursuant to this section unless
    the clerk was grossly negligent or engaged in willful miscon-
    duct." Va. Code § 17.1-294(D).
    The General Assembly finally addressed redaction in the
    2007 legislation mandating that clerks provide secure remote
    access by July 1, 2008. See Va. Code § 17.1-279(D)(3). The
    General Assembly noted clerks’ authority to redact SSNs
    from digital land records available through secure remote
    access, authorized hiring private vendors to run redaction
    software, and authorized using Technology Trust Fund money
    for this purpose. See Va. Code § 17.1-279. The legislation
    would have also required clerks to complete the redaction
    process by July 1, 2010, but this provision never went into
    effect because the General Assembly failed to appropriate the
    necessary funds. See 2007 Va. Acts 872; 2007 Va. Acts 748.
    These efforts focused solely on digital land records available
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                        7
    online. Virginia does not redact SSNs from original land
    records maintained at local courthouses even though Virginia
    law requires that such records remain publicly accessible.
    The redaction process involves two steps—one electronic,
    the other manual. First, computer software checks digital land
    records and, in essence, labels each document "SSN found,"
    "SSN probably found," "SSN possibly found," and "SSN not
    found." Individuals then manually review all but the last cate-
    gory, which they randomly sample. According to stipulation,
    The accuracy of the redaction methods used by the
    circuit court clerks with regard to images that actu-
    ally have social security numbers is between 95%
    and 99%. After redaction, a social security number
    that remains un-redacted in the online land records
    will be redacted if the Clerk is informed of the inac-
    curacy. If not brought to the Clerk’s attention, it will
    remain accessible in the online land records.
    J.A. 230. One company, Computing System Innovations
    ("CSI"), handled redaction for 67 counties. In processing
    about 50 million images, CSI manually reviewed about 5 mil-
    lion and discovered that 1,575,422 (about 3.21%) contained
    SSNs.3
    By July 2008, 105 of Virginia’s 120 counties reported that
    they had completed the redaction process. Among the 15 that
    remained, two planned to finish by July 2010 and the rest
    planned to finish by December 2009. Despite the incomplete
    redaction, these 15 counties nonetheless continued to make
    their land records available online through secure remote
    access.
    3
    Ostergren testified that on July 15, 2008, after Hanover County pur-
    portedly finished redacting SSNs, she successfully located Hanover
    County land records containing unredacted SSNs through secure remote
    access.
    8                     OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    C.
    When Virginia clerks of court started placing land records
    containing unredacted SSNs online, Ostergren began lobbying
    the General Assembly in opposition and contacting individu-
    als whose SSNs were compromised. She has engaged in simi-
    lar advocacy across the country, but such advocacy alone met
    with little success. Ostergren created her website
    www.TheVirginiaWatchdog.com in 2003 and, two years later,
    began posting copies of public records containing unredacted
    SSNs obtained from government websites. Since then, Oster-
    gren has posted numerous Virginia land records showing
    SSNs that she herself obtained through Virginia’s secure
    remote access website. For example, she explained that
    searching for the term "Internal Revenue Service," "Depart-
    ment of Justice," or "United States" produces thousands of
    federal tax liens, and all those filed before 2006 contain SSNs.
    In posting records online, Ostergren seeks to publicize her
    message that governments are mishandling SSNs and gener-
    ate pressure for reform.4 She explained that "seeing a docu-
    ment containing an SSN posted on my website makes a
    viewer understand instantly, at a gut level, why it is so impor-
    tant to prevent the government from making this information
    available on line [sic]." J.A. 89. She added that merely
    explaining the problem lacks even "one-tenth the emotional
    impact that is conveyed by the document itself, posted on the
    website." J.A. 89. Perhaps for this reason, Ostergren received
    considerable media attention when she began posting records
    online. Furthermore, many government agencies outside Vir-
    ginia responded by removing public records from the Internet
    or redacting private information.
    4
    Normally Ostergren reveals only public officials’ SSNs, reasoning that
    they are "the people who have the influence to address the problem." J.A.
    89. She explained, however, that in June 2008 the clerk of court for
    Pulaski County, Arkansas, refused to remove land records from the Inter-
    net pending SSN redaction until Ostergren published land records that
    showed several prominent local citizens’ SSNs.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                            9
    Despite this success, Ostergren’s website has also contrib-
    uted to the underlying social concern that motivates her advo-
    cacy. Because one can visit her website and find public
    records showing SSNs without needing to register or input
    search terms, Ostergren makes Virginia land records showing
    SSNs more accessible to the public than they are through Vir-
    ginia’s secure remote access system. Potential wrongdoers not
    experienced or motivated enough to register for secure remote
    access might nonetheless stumble upon Ostergren’s website
    and obtain SSNs. Indeed, one person has pleaded guilty to
    using Ostergren’s website to obtain fraudulent credit cards.
    D.
    The controversy that spurred this case arose from Oster-
    gren’s disclosure of others’ SSNs printed in Virginia land
    records that she posted online. Section 59.1-443.2 of the Code
    of Virginia provides that "a person shall not . . .
    [i]ntentionally communicate another individual’s social secur-
    ity number to the general public." Va. Code § 59.1-
    443.2(A)(1). In Spring 2008, the General Assembly removed
    a statutory exception for "records required by law to be open
    to the public."5 2008 Va. Acts 837. The Attorney General of
    Virginia later indicated that, after this change took effect on
    July 1, 2008, Ostergren would be prosecuted under section
    59.1-443.2 for publicly disseminating Virginia land records
    containing unredacted SSNs.6
    5
    Ostergren alleges that the General Assembly made this change "in
    direct response to [her] website." J.A. 10.
    6
    For a section 59.1-443.2 violation, the Attorney General may seek vari-
    ous civil penalties, including fines and injunctions. See Va. Code §§ 59.1-
    201 to -206. Furthermore, "[a]ny person who suffers loss as the result of
    a violation" may "initiate an action to recover actual damages, or $500,
    whichever is greater," or for a willful violation, "an amount not exceeding
    three times the actual damages sustained, or $1,000, whichever is greater,"
    plus "reasonable attorneys’ fees and court costs." Va. Code § 59.1-204.
    10                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    On June 11, 2008, Ostergren brought this action in the
    Eastern District of Virginia under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking
    declaratory and injunctive relief, and attorney’s fees and
    costs. She contended that enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against
    her for publishing copies of public records lawfully obtained
    from a government website violates the First Amendment.
    During a hearing on Ostergren’s motion for preliminary
    injunctive relief, Virginia’s Attorney General agreed not to
    enforce the statute against Ostergren while this action remains
    pending.
    On August 22, 2008, the district court concluded, based
    upon stipulated facts, that "Virginia Code § 59.1-443.2 is
    unconstitutional as applied to Ostegren’s [sic] website as it
    presently exists." Ostergren, 
    2008 WL 3895593
    , at *14. On
    June 2, 2009, after further briefing and argument about
    injunctive relief, the court entered
    a permanent injunction . . . against enforcement of
    Va. Code § 59.1-443.2 against any iteration of Oster-
    gren’s website, now or in the future, that simply
    republishes publicly obtainable documents contain-
    ing unredacted SSNs of Virginia legislators, Virginia
    Executive Officers or Clerks of Court as part as [sic]
    an effort to reform Virginia law and practice respect-
    ing the publication of SSNs online.
    
    Ostergren, 643 F. Supp. 2d at 770
    . The Attorney General
    appealed, challenging the district court’s August 22, 2008,
    constitutional determination. Ostergren cross-appealed, argu-
    ing that the June 2, 2009, award of injunctive relief was too
    narrow. We consider the appeal and cross-appeal below.
    II.
    First we review the district court’s August 22, 2008, consti-
    tutional determination. "We review de novo a properly pre-
    served constitutional claim." United States v. Hall , 551 F.3d
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                            11
    257, 266 (4th Cir. 2009). Virginia argues that SSNs are cate-
    gorically unprotected speech that may be prohibited entirely.
    Alternatively, Virginia argues that the state interest in pre-
    serving citizens’ privacy by limiting SSNs’ public disclosure
    justifies barring Ostergren’s speech. In other words, Virginia
    maintains that the First Amendment does not apply here and
    that, even if it does, enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against
    Ostergren should survive First Amendment scrutiny. We
    address each argument in turn.7
    A.
    The First Amendment’s protection of "freedom of speech,
    or of the press," was designed to allow individuals to criticize
    their government without fear. U.S. Const. amend I; see Gen-
    tile v. State Bar of Nev. , 
    501 U.S. 1030
    , 1034 (1991) ("There
    7
    Virginia challenged standing and ripeness before the district court but
    not on appeal. We observe that standing and ripeness are established
    merely to satisfy ourselves of our jurisdiction. Although no prosecution
    occurred, Ostergren has standing because the Attorney General planned to
    initiate prosecution and section 59.1-443.2 was recently amended to reach
    her speech. See N.C. Right to Life, Inc. v. Bartlett , 
    168 F.3d 705
    , 710 (4th
    Cir. 1999) ("A non-moribund statute that facially restricts expressive
    activity by the class to which the plaintiff belongs presents . . . a credible
    threat [of prosecution], and a case or controversy thus exists in the absence
    of compelling evidence to the contrary." (internal quotations and alter-
    ations omitted)); Mobil Oil Corp. v. Att’y Gen. of Va., 
    940 F.2d 73
    , 76 (4th
    Cir. 1991) (holding that where a law was recently amended to cover con-
    duct at issue "[i]t would be unreasonable to assume" that the government
    made that change "without intending that it be enforced"). Furthermore,
    Ostergren’s constitutional claim regarding publishing Virginia land
    records appears ripe because "[t]he factual situation is well-developed,"
    there are "no material facts that are in dispute," and "[t]he parties argue
    only on the application of the law." Ostergren, 
    2008 WL 3895593
    , at *5;
    see Miller v. Brown , 
    462 F.3d 312
    , 319 (4th Cir. 2006) ("balanc[ing] the
    fitness of the issues for judicial decision with the hardship to the parties
    of withholding court consideration" to assess ripeness and noting that "[a]
    case is fit for judicial decision when the issues are purely legal and when
    the action in controversy is final and not dependent on future uncertain-
    ties" (internal quotations omitted)).
    12                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    is no question that speech critical of the exercise of the State’s
    power lies at the very center of the First Amendment."); New
    York Times Co. v. Sullivan , 
    376 U.S. 254
    , 273 (1964) (calling
    liberty to criticize government conduct "the central meaning
    of the First Amendment"). This protection also precludes the
    government from silencing the expression of unpopular ideas.
    See Police Dep’t of Chi. v. Mosley , 
    408 U.S. 92
    , 95 (1972)
    ("[T]he First Amendment means that government has no
    power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas,
    its subject matter, or its content."). Accordingly, laws restrict-
    ing the content of expression normally are invalid under the
    First Amendment unless narrowly tailored to promote a com-
    pelling state interest. See United States v. Playboy Entm’t
    Group, Inc., 
    529 U.S. 803
    , 813 (2000) ("If a statute regulates
    speech based on its content, it must be narrowly tailored to
    promote a compelling Government interest."); see also R.A.V.
    v. City of St. Paul , 
    505 U.S. 377
    , 382 (1992) ("Content-based
    regulations are presumptively invalid.").
    The Supreme Court has nevertheless identified certain cate-
    gories of "unprotected" speech that may be circumscribed
    entirely. Fighting words, obscenity, incitement of illegal
    activity, and child pornography are examples. See Chaplinsky
    v. New Hampshire , 
    315 U.S. 568
    , 571-72 (1942); Roth v.
    United States , 
    354 U.S. 476
    , 485 (1957); Brandenburg v.
    Ohio, 
    395 U.S. 444
    , 447-48 (1969); New York v. Ferber , 
    458 U.S. 747
    , 764 (1982); see also Schenck v. United States , 
    249 U.S. 47
    , 52 (1919) ("The most stringent protection of free
    speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a
    theatre and causing a panic."). The Court has said that these
    categories of unprotected speech "are no essential part of any
    exposition of ideas, and are of such slight social value as a
    step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them
    is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and
    morality." 
    Chaplinsky, 315 U.S. at 572
    .
    Virginia argues that the unredacted SSNs on Ostergren’s
    website should not be protected under the First Amendment
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                            13
    because they facilitate identity theft and are no essential part
    of any exposition of ideas. See Eugene Volokh, Crime-
    Facilitating Speech , 57 Stan. L. Rev. 1095, 1146-47 (2005)
    (arguing that SSNs and computer passwords are "categories
    of speech that are likely to have virtually no noncriminal
    uses" and that "[r]estricting the publication of full social
    security numbers or passwords . . . will not materially inter-
    fere with valuable speech"). Although these observations
    might be true under certain circumstances, we cannot agree
    with Virginia’s argument here. The unredacted SSNs on Vir-
    ginia land records that Ostergren has posted online are inte-
    gral to her message. Indeed, they are her message. Displaying
    them proves Virginia’s failure to safeguard private informa-
    tion and powerfully demonstrates why Virginia citizens
    should be concerned.8 Cf. United States v. Hubbell , 
    530 U.S. 8
       Virginia argues that Ostergren could redact several digits from each
    SSN and still express her message. But the First Amendment protects
    Ostergren’s freedom to decide how her message should be communicated.
    Although wearing a jacket bearing the words "Boo for the Draft" rather
    than "Fuck the Draft" may convey the same political critique, the Supreme
    Court found that the government cannot prohibit the more offensive ver-
    sion. Cohen v. California , 
    403 U.S. 15
    , 24 (1971) (noting "the usual rule
    that governmental bodies may not prescribe the form or content of individ-
    ual expression"). The Court explained:
    [M]uch linguistic expression serves a dual communicative func-
    tion: it conveys not only ideas capable of relatively precise,
    detached explication, but otherwise inexpressible emotions as
    well. In fact, words are often chosen as much for their emotive
    as their cognitive force. We cannot sanction the view that the
    Constitution, while solicitous of the cognitive content of individ-
    ual speech has little or no regard for that emotive function which
    practically speaking, may often be the more important element of
    the overall message sought to be communicated.
    
    Id. at 26.
    Furthermore, partial redaction would diminish the documents’
    shock value and make Ostergren less credible because people could not
    tell whether she or Virginia did the partial redaction. See Ross v. Midwest
    Commc’ns, Inc., 
    870 F.2d 271
    , 274 (5th Cir. 1989) (holding that disclos-
    ing a rape victim’s name in a documentary about the convicted man’s
    potential innocence was "of unique importance to the credibility and per-
    14                      OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    27, 36-37 (2000) (noting that "the act of producing documents
    in response to a subpoena . . . may implicitly communicate
    statements of fact" because "[b]y producing documents . . .
    the witness would admit that the papers existed, were in his
    possession or control, and were authentic" (internal quotations
    omitted)).
    We find particularly significant just how Ostergren com-
    municates SSNs. She does not simply list them beside peo-
    ple’s names but rather provides copies of entire documents
    maintained by government officials. Given her criticism about
    how public records are managed, we cannot see how drawing
    attention to the problem by displaying those very documents
    could be considered unprotected speech. Indeed, the Supreme
    Court has deemed such speech particularly valuable within
    our society:
    Public records by their very nature are of interest to
    those concerned with the administration of govern-
    ment, and a public benefit is performed by the
    reporting of the true contents of the records by the
    media. The freedom of the press to publish that
    information appears to us to be of critical importance
    to our type of government in which the citizenry is
    the final judge of the proper conduct of public busi-
    ness.
    Cox Broad. Corp. v. Cohn , 
    420 U.S. 469
    , 495 (1975). Thus,
    although we do not foreclose the possibility that communicat-
    suasive force of the story"); Gilbert v. Med. Econ. Co. , 
    665 F.2d 305
    , 308
    (10th Cir. 1981) (regarding an article about medical malpractice that dis-
    closed a doctor’s name and photograph, finding that "these truthful repre-
    sentations . . . strengthen the impact and credibility of the article" because
    "[t]hey obviate any impression that the problems raised in the article are
    remote or hypothetical, thus providing an aura of immediacy and even
    urgency that might not exist had plaintiff’s name and photograph been
    suppressed").
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                           15
    ing SSNs might be found unprotected in other situations, we
    conclude, on these facts, that the First Amendment does reach
    Ostergren’s publication of Virginia land records containing
    unredacted SSNs.9
    B.
    We next consider whether enforcing section 59.1-443.2
    against Ostergren for posting online Virginia land records
    containing unredacted SSNs survives First Amendment scru-
    tiny. Although Ostergren’s political speech criticizing Vir-
    ginia "lies at the very center of the First Amendment,"
    
    Gentile, 501 U.S. at 1034
    , publishing SSNs online under-
    mines individual privacy. Freedom of speech must therefore
    be weighed against the "right of privacy" which the Supreme
    Court has also recognized. See Cox Broad. , 420 U.S. at 488
    (recognizing "the so-called right of privacy"). The Court tried
    to strike that balance in Cox Broadcasting and subsequent
    cases involving restrictions on truthful publication of private
    information. Because we must decide where this case fits
    within that balance, we begin our analysis by reviewing those
    decisions.
    In Cox Broadcasting, the Supreme Court ruled that the First
    Amendment prohibits a lawsuit against a television station for
    broadcasting a rape victim’s name when the station learned
    9
    After this appeal was briefed and orally argued, the Supreme Court
    clarified that Chaplinsky does not provide a sufficient test for identifying
    categories of unprotected speech because such categories derive from his-
    tory and tradition. See United States v. Stevens , 
    130 S. Ct. 1577
    , 1586
    (2010) (declining to recognize a new category of unprotected speech for
    depictions of animal cruelty). The Court also disavowed "a freewheeling
    authority to declare new categories of speech outside the scope of the First
    Amendment," admitting only that "[m]aybe there are some categories of
    speech that have been historically unprotected, but have not yet been spe-
    cifically identified or discussed as such in our case law." 
    Id. Because we
    already find Virginia’s argument unpersuasive, we need not also conduct
    the historical analysis that Stevens would require.
    16                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    her identity from a publicly available court record. The issue
    arose in the context of six youths being indicted for rape and
    murder. Although their case garnered substantial press atten-
    tion, the victim’s identity was not disclosed because Georgia
    law prohibited "publish[ing] or broadcast[ing] the name or
    identity of a rape victim." 
    Id. at 472.
    During trial, the clerk of
    court showed a reporter the indictments even though they
    clearly stated the victim’s full name. The reporter later
    explained, "[N]o attempt was made by the clerk or anyone
    else to withhold the name and identity of the victim from me
    or from anyone else and the said indictments apparently were
    available for public inspection upon request." 
    Id. at 472
    n.3.
    When the television station employing the reporter later
    broadcast the victim’s name, her father sued for money dam-
    ages. The Georgia Supreme Court held that his "complaint
    stated a cause of action ‘for the invasion of the . . . right of
    privacy, or for the tort of public disclosure,’" and rejected the
    station’s First Amendment defense. 
    Id. at 474
    (quoting Cox
    Broad. Corp. v. Cohn , 
    200 S.E.2d 127
    , 130 (Ga. 1973)).
    The Supreme Court reversed. Although recognizing "a
    strong tide running in favor of the so-called right of privacy,"
    
    id. at 488,
    the Court reasoned that "the interests in privacy
    fade when the information involved already appears on the
    public record," 
    id. at 494-95.
    The Court observed that "[b]y
    placing the information in the public domain on official court
    records, the State must be presumed to have concluded that
    the public interest was thereby being served." 
    Id. at 495.
    The
    Court also discussed the importance of truthful reporting
    about public records and expressed reluctance to create a doc-
    trine that "would invite timidity and self-censorship and very
    likely lead to the suppression of many items that . . . should
    be made available to the public." 
    Id. at 496.
    The Court con-
    cluded:
    At the very least, the First and Fourteenth Amend-
    ments will not allow exposing the press to liability
    for truthfully publishing information released to the
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                     17
    public in official court records. . . . Once true infor-
    mation is disclosed in public court documents open
    to public inspection, the press cannot be sanctioned
    for publishing it.
    
    Id. The Court
    explained that "[i]f there are privacy interests
    to be protected in judicial proceedings, the States must
    respond by means which avoid public documentation or other
    exposure of private information." 
    Id. Although Cox
    Broadcasting avoided deciding whether
    truthful publication may ever be punished, subsequent cases
    helped to clarify the relevant inquiry. In Oklahoma Publishing
    Co. v. District Court, 
    430 U.S. 308
    (1977), the Supreme Court
    held that a trial court could not bar newspapers from publish-
    ing a juvenile offender’s name learned during a court pro-
    ceeding open to the public. The Court explained, "‘Once a
    public hearing ha[s] been held, what transpired there [can]not
    be subject to prior restraint.’" 
    Id. at 311
    (quoting Nebraska
    Press Ass’n v. Stuart , 
    427 U.S. 539
    , 568 (1976)). In Land-
    mark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia , 
    435 U.S. 829
    (1978),
    the Court held that Virginia could not punish a newspaper for
    publishing correct information that had been leaked about
    confidential proceedings by the Virginia Judicial Inquiry and
    Review Commission. The Court reasoned that Virginia’s
    interests in preserving respect for courts and protecting indi-
    vidual judges’ reputations did not justify prohibiting speech
    that "clearly served those interests in public scrutiny and dis-
    cussion of governmental affairs which the First Amendment
    was adopted to protect." 
    Id. at 839.
    The Supreme Court later articulated a constitutional stan-
    dard based upon these decisions. In Smith v. Daily Mail Pub-
    lishing Co., 
    443 U.S. 97
    (1979), the Court observed that Cox
    Broadcasting, Oklahoma Publishing, and Landmark Commu-
    nications "all suggest strongly that if a newspaper lawfully
    obtains truthful information about a matter of public signifi-
    cance then state officials may not constitutionally punish pub-
    18                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    lication of the information, absent a need to further a state
    interest of the highest order." Daily Mail , 443 U.S. at 103.
    This case involved two newspapers convicted under a West
    Virginia statute that barred publishing the names of juvenile
    offenders without court approval. Reporters had learned cer-
    tain juvenile offenders’ names by questioning witnesses,
    police officers, and the prosecutor. The Supreme Court invali-
    dated the convictions because West Virginia’s interest in pro-
    tecting juvenile offenders’ anonymity was insufficiently
    important and "there [was] no evidence to demonstrate that
    the imposition of criminal penalties [was] necessary to protect
    the confidentiality of juvenile proceedings." 
    Id. at 105.
    After this flurry of decisions, the Supreme Court applied
    the Daily Mail standard roughly a decade later in another case
    about a rape victim. In The Florida Star v. B.J.F. , 
    491 U.S. 524
    (1989), the appellee B.J.F. reported to local police that
    she had been robbed and sexually assaulted. Despite its inter-
    nal policy against revealing names of rape victims, the police
    department inadvertently placed a police report containing
    B.J.F.’s name in its press room. The department did not
    restrict access to the press room or to reports made available
    therein. After a reporter copied the police report verbatim, an
    area newspaper published an article containing B.J.F.’s full
    name. She sued for money damages, claiming the newspaper
    had been per se negligent because Florida law prohibited
    printing, publishing, or broadcasting names of rape victims in
    any instrument of mass communication. During trial, B.J.F.
    testified that publicity of her rape made her suffer extreme
    embarrassment, receive additional threats of rape, change her
    phone number and residence, seek police protection, and
    obtain medical health counseling. The jury awarded damages
    and a Florida appellate court affirmed, rejecting the newspa-
    per’s First Amendment defense.
    The Supreme Court reversed. Before applying the Daily
    Mail standard regarding truthful publication of lawfully
    obtained information, the Court noted three underlying con-
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                   19
    siderations that justified this analytical approach. First, that
    the standard covers only lawfully obtained information means
    that the government retains ample means of protecting inter-
    ests that might be threatened by publication. This consider-
    ation has additional implications when the government itself
    initially holds the information:
    To the extent sensitive information is in the govern-
    ment’s custody, it has even greater power to forestall
    or mitigate the injury caused by its release. The gov-
    ernment may classify certain information, establish
    and enforce procedures ensuring its redacted release,
    and extend a damages remedy against the govern-
    ment or its officials where the government’s mishan-
    dling of sensitive information leads to its
    dissemination. Where information is entrusted to the
    government, a less drastic means than punishing
    truthful publication almost always exists for guard-
    ing against the dissemination of private facts.
    
    Id. at 534.
    Second, "punishing the press for its dissemination
    of information which is already publicly available is relatively
    unlikely to advance the interests in the service of which the
    State seeks to act." 
    Id. at 535.
    The Court added that "where
    the government has made certain information publicly avail-
    able, it is highly anomalous to sanction persons other than the
    source of its release." 
    Id. Third, "‘timidity
    and self-
    censorship’ . . . may result from allowing the media to be pun-
    ished for publishing certain truthful information." 
    Id. (quoting Cox
    Broad. , 420 U.S. at 496). The Court explained that,
    where the government discloses private information, not pro-
    tecting its publication "would force upon the media the oner-
    ous obligation of sifting through government press releases,
    reports, and pronouncements to prune out material arguably
    unlawful for publication . . . even where the newspaper’s sole
    object was to reproduce, with no substantial change, the gov-
    ernment’s rendition of the event in question." 
    Id. at 536.
    Hav-
    ing reiterated these considerations, the Court endorsed the
    20                      OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    Daily Mail standard: "We hold . . . that where a newspaper
    publishes truthful information which it has lawfully obtained,
    punishment may lawfully be imposed, if at all, only when nar-
    rowly tailored to a state interest of the highest order." 
    Id. at 541.
    Applying this standard, the Supreme Court found that the
    newspaper article about B.J.F. truthfully published lawfully
    obtained information about a matter of public significance.
    The Court also found that punishing the newspaper was not
    narrowly tailored to Florida’s interest in preserving rape vic-
    tims’ privacy because the police department itself could have
    initially withheld the sensitive information.10 That the depart-
    ment’s disclosure was actually inadvertent was immaterial.
    See 
    id. at 538
    ("B.J.F.’s identity would never have come to
    light were it not for the erroneous, if inadvertent, inclusion by
    the Department of her full name in an incident report made
    available in a pressroom open to the public."). The Court con-
    cluded: "Where, as here, the government has failed to police
    itself in disseminating information, it is clear under Cox
    Broadcasting, Oklahoma Publishing, and Landmark Commu-
    nications that the imposition of damages against the press for
    its subsequent publication can hardly be said to be a narrowly
    tailored means of safeguarding anonymity." 
    Id. Notably, Cox
    Broadcasting and its progeny avoided decid-
    10
    Notably, the Court expressly avoided deciding whether Florida’s
    asserted interest constituted "a state interest of the highest order"—
    resolving the case instead solely on narrow-tailoring grounds. Daily 
    Mail, 443 U.S. at 103
    ; see Florida Star , 491 U.S. at 537 ("At a time in which
    we are daily reminded of the tragic reality of rape, it is undeniable that
    these are highly significant interests, a fact underscored by the Florida
    Legislature’s explicit attempt to protect these interests by enacting a crimi-
    nal statute prohibiting much dissemination of victim identities. We accord-
    ingly do not rule out the possibility that, in a proper case, imposing civil
    sanctions for publication of the name of a rape victim might be so over-
    whelmingly necessary to advance these interests as to satisfy the Daily
    Mail standard.").
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                          21
    ing the ultimate question of whether truthful publication could
    ever be prohibited. Each decision resolved this ongoing con-
    flict between privacy and the First Amendment "only as it
    arose in a discrete factual context." Florida 
    Star, 491 U.S. at 530
    . The Florida Star Court noted that "the future may bring
    scenarios which prudence counsels our not resolving anticipa-
    torily." 
    Id. at 532
    (citing Near v. Minnesota ex rel. Olson, 
    283 U.S. 697
    , 716 (1931) (hypothesizing "publication of the sail-
    ing dates of transports or the number and location of
    troops")).
    Those decisions nonetheless make clear that Ostergren’s
    constitutional challenge must be evaluated using the Daily
    Mail standard.11 Accordingly, Virginia may enforce section
    59.1-443.2 against Ostergren for publishing lawfully
    obtained, truthful information about a matter of public signifi-
    cance "only when narrowly tailored to a state interest of the
    highest order." 
    Id. at 541.
    Virginia concedes that Ostergren
    lawfully obtained and truthfully published the Virginia land
    records that she posted online. Moreover, this information
    plainly concerns "a matter of public significance," Daily 
    Mail, 443 U.S. at 103
    , because displaying the contents of public
    records and criticizing Virginia’s release of private informa-
    tion convey political messages that concern the public, see
    Cox Broad. , 420 U.S. at 495 ("Public records by their very
    nature are of interest to those concerned with the administra-
    tion of government, and a public benefit is performed by the
    reporting of the true contents of the records by the media.");
    Landmark 
    Commc’ns, 435 U.S. at 839
    (deeming the operation
    of government affairs "a matter of public interest"). There-
    11
    Counsel for the Attorney General conceded during oral argument that,
    under this standard, Ostergren’s advocacy website cannot be distinguished
    from a television station or newspaper. See Sheehan v. Gregoire , 272 F.
    Supp. 2d 1135, 1145 (W.D. Wash. 2003) (considering a website about
    police accountability "analytically indistinguishable from a newspaper"
    where the website "communicates truthful lawfully-obtained, publicly-
    available personal identifying information with respect to a matter of pub-
    lic significance").
    22                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    fore, the only remaining issues are (1) whether Virginia has
    asserted a state interest of the highest order and (2) whether
    enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against Ostergren would be nar-
    rowly tailored to that interest. We address each in turn.
    1.
    Virginia asserts that its interest in protecting individual pri-
    vacy by limiting SSNs’ public disclosure constitutes "a state
    interest of the highest order." Daily Mail , 443 U.S. at 103.
    Although noting that "it should not be difficult for a court to
    conclude that the protection of SSNs from public disclosure
    should qualify as a State interest of the highest order," the dis-
    trict court reached the opposite conclusion upon reasoning
    that Virginia’s conduct had been inconsistent with that inter-
    est. Ostergren, 
    2008 WL 3895593
    , at *10; see 
    id. ("[T]he State’s
    own conduct in making those SSNs publicly available
    through unredacted release on the Internet significantly under-
    cuts the assertion . . . that the State actually regards protection
    of SSNs as an interest of the highest order."). Before discuss-
    ing this issue, we address the proper analytical framework for
    determining what constitutes a state interest of the highest
    order.
    a.
    In assessing Virginia’s asserted interest, the district court
    put to one side that interest’s actual importance and instead
    considered only whether Virginia itself considered the interest
    important—applying a subjective rather than objective stan-
    dard. The court explained, "[I]t is not the perception of a fed-
    eral court that defines a State interest of the highest order.
    Instead, it is the State’s view and its conduct that, under
    accepted First Amendment jurisprudence, must supply the
    basis for such a conclusion." Id.; see Ostergren, 
    643 F. Supp. 2d
    at 766 ("Whether the State has an interest of the highest
    order is answered by examining objectively the means by
    which the State treats the information in question."). The
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                    23
    court later added, "When, as here, a State legislature has
    expressed its own view of the priority of a State interest, a
    federal court is not permitted to revise that view to save the
    statute." Ostergren, 
    2008 WL 3895593
    , at *11.
    In reaching this conclusion, the district court may have lim-
    ited its consideration unnecessarily. In deciding what consti-
    tutes a state interest of the highest order, courts cannot be
    bound by "the State’s view and its conduct." 
    Id. at *10.
    For
    example, although a state government might demonstrate a
    fervent, consistently applied policy of punishing people for
    not cleaning up after their dogs, we would not therefore be
    compelled to consider this a state interest of the highest order.
    Conversely, although a state government might practice racial
    discrimination for decades—and many have—we would not
    therefore be barred from considering racial equality a state
    interest of the highest order. See Regents of Univ. of Ca. v.
    Bakke, 
    438 U.S. 265
    , 396 (1978) (Marshall, J., concurring)
    ("In light of the sorry history of discrimination and its devas-
    tating impact on the lives of Negroes, bringing the Negro into
    the mainstream of American life should be a state interest of
    the highest order.").
    Furthermore, Supreme Court precedent applying the Daily
    Mail standard makes clear that objective criteria can be con-
    sidered when deciding what constitutes a state interest of the
    highest order. In Butterworth v. Smith , 
    494 U.S. 624
    (1990),
    Florida maintained that its interest in preserving grand jury
    secrecy justified preventing a reporter from publicizing his
    own grand jury testimony. Concluding that Florida’s asserted
    interest did not constitute a state interest of the highest order,
    the Court observed that the Federal Rules of Criminal Proce-
    dure contained no such requirement and that "only 14 States
    have joined Florida in imposing an obligation of secrecy on
    grand jury witnesses." 
    Id. at 635.
    The Court explained that,
    "[w]hile these practices are not conclusive as to the constitu-
    tionality of Florida’s rule, they are probative of the weight to
    be assigned Florida’s asserted interests       and the extent to
    24                      OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    which the prohibition in question is necessary to further
    them." 
    Id. (emphasis added).12
    Despite concluding that a subjective standard was required,
    the district court nevertheless observed that "in concept, Va.
    Code § 59.1-443.2 furthers what ought to be, by any objective
    measure, a State interest of the highest order." Ostergren, 
    643 F. Supp. 2d
    at 769. We turn now to that issue.
    b.
    We find it helpful to place our inquiry in historical context
    by discussing the genesis of modern privacy concerns sur-
    rounding SSNs. The Social Security Administration created
    SSNs in 1936 merely to track individuals’ earnings and eligi-
    bility for Social Security benefits. They soon became used for
    other purposes, however, because SSNs provide unique per-
    manent identification for almost every person. Indeed, the
    federal government was among the first to avail itself of their
    utility. In 1943, President Roosevelt ordered that any federal
    agency which "establish[es] a new system of permanent
    account numbers pertaining to individual persons" must "uti-
    lize exclusively the Social Security Act account numbers."
    Exec. Order No. 9397, 8 Fed. Reg. 16,095 (Nov. 30, 1943).
    Countless state and federal agencies later adopted the SSN,
    particularly during the 1960s. For example, Congress autho-
    rized the Internal Revenue Service to begin using the SSN for
    taxpayer identification in 1961. See Act of Oct. 5, 1961, Pub.
    L. No. 87-397, 75 Stat. 828 (1961). Private organizations,
    especially financial institutions, also started using the SSN for
    account identification and other purposes. Indeed, the Bank
    12
    We note that, contrary to the concurrence’s suggestion, our First
    Amendment analysis does indeed involve "a fact-intensive inquiry into the
    state’s view and its actual conduct in furthering its asserted interest." Infra
    at 47. We simply conduct that inquiry mainly regarding narrow-tailoring
    —the approach Florida Star employed—rather than regarding the state
    interest itself—the concurrence’s preferred approach.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                   25
    Records and Foreign Transactions Act, Pub. L. No. 91-508,
    84 Stat. 1114 (1970), required banks, savings and loan associ-
    ations, credit unions, and securities brokers and dealers to col-
    lect customers’ SSNs. See, e.g. , 
    id. § 101
    (requiring "the
    maintenance of appropriate types of records by insured banks
    of the United States where such records have a high degree
    of usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or
    proceedings").
    Public concern about information privacy, however, soon
    increased. In 1973, the Department of Health, Education, and
    Welfare published an influential report warning about "an
    increasing tendency for the Social Security number to be used
    as if it were an SUI [standard universal identifier]." U.S.
    Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, Report of the
    Secretary’s Advisory Committee on Automated Personal Data
    Systems: Records, Computers, and the Rights of Citizens
    xxxii (1973). Congress responded by enacting the Privacy Act
    of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, which prohibits government agen-
    cies from denying rights, privileges, or benefits because a per-
    son withholds his SSN. By enacting this statute, "Congress
    sought to curtail the expanding use of social security numbers
    by federal and local agencies and, by so doing, to eliminate
    the threat to individual privacy and confidentiality of informa-
    tion posed by common numerical identifiers." Doyle v. Wil-
    son, 
    529 F. Supp. 1343
    , 1348 (D. Del. 1982). The related
    Senate Report stated that widespread usage of SSNs was "one
    of the most serious manifestations of privacy concerns in the
    Nation." S. Rep. No. 93-1183 (1974), as reprinted in 1974
    U.S.C.C.A.N. 6916, 6943.
    Since then, usage of SSNs by federal and local agencies,
    financial institutions, and other organizations has become
    nearly ubiquitous. Beyond simply matching records with
    accounts, these organizations also frequently use SSNs for
    account authentication. This means that the SSN provides a
    password that lets one modify account information. By conse-
    quence, the SSN has become a crucial piece of information
    26                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    allowing the creation or modification of myriad personal
    accounts. See U.S. Government Accountability Office, GAO
    No. 09-759T, Identity Theft: Governments Have Acted to
    Protect Personally Identifiable Information, but Vulnerabili-
    ties Remain 8 (calling the SSN "a vital piece of information
    needed to function in American society" and noting that "U.S.
    citizens generally need an SSN to pay taxes, obtain a driver’s
    license, or open a bank account, among other things"). Unfor-
    tunately, for that reason, SSNs can easily be used to commit
    identity theft—that is, tendering another’s identifying infor-
    mation to carry out financial fraud or other criminal activity.
    See Jonathan J. Darrow & Stephen D. Lichtenstein, "Do You
    Really Need My Social Security Number?" Data Collection
    Practices in the Digital Age , 10 N.C. J. L. & Tech. 1, 4-5
    (2008) ("Reflecting the unfortunate reality that a single num-
    ber can provide access to multiple accounts, commentators
    have lamented that the social security number has become a
    ‘skeleton key’ for identity theft criminals."). One therefore
    has a considerable privacy interest in keeping his SSN confi-
    dential.
    We previously considered this privacy interest in Greid-
    inger v. Davis , 
    988 F.2d 1344
    (4th Cir. 1993). Invalidating a
    statute that required people to provide their SSN before they
    could vote and then publicly disclosed that confidential infor-
    mation, we observed:
    Since the passage of the Privacy Act, an individual’s
    concern over his SSN’s confidentiality and misuse
    has become significantly more compelling. For
    example, armed with one’s SSN, an unscrupulous
    individual could obtain a person’s welfare benefits
    or Social Security benefits, order new checks at a
    new address on that person’s checking account,
    obtain credit cards, or even obtain the person’s pay-
    check.
    
    Id. at 1353;
    see also City of Kirkland v. Sheehan , No. 01-2-
    09513-7, 
    2001 WL 1751590
    , at *6 (Wash. Sup. Ct. May 10,
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                   27
    2001) ("[A]ccess to an SSN allows a person, agency or com-
    pany to more efficiently and effectively search for and seize
    information and assets of another, a power originally avail-
    able only to the government and one which was subject to
    direct Constitutional restraint."). We added that "the harm that
    can be inflicted from the disclosure of a SSN to an unscrupu-
    lous individual is alarming and potentially financially ruin-
    ous." 
    Greidinger, 988 F.2d at 1354
    . On average, victims of
    identity theft lose about $17,000 and must spend over $1,000
    and 600 hours of personal time cleaning up their credit
    reports. See Danielle Keats Citron, Reservoirs of Danger: The
    Evolution of Public and Private Law at the Dawn of the Infor-
    mation Age, 80 S. Cal. L. Rev. 241, 253 (2007).
    Reflecting these concerns, Congress and all 50 States have
    passed laws regulating SSN collection and disclosure. See
    Andrew Serwin, Information Security and Privacy §§ 22-23
    (2009); see, e.g. , 18 U.S.C. § 2721 (restricting release of
    SSNs from motor vehicle records). Some States also recog-
    nize a constitutional right barring the government from dis-
    closing SSNs without consent. See, e.g., State ex rel. Beacon
    Journal Publ’g Co. v. City of Akron , 
    640 N.E.2d 164
    , 169
    (Ohio 1994). Although not dispositive, these practices indi-
    cate a broad consensus that SSNs’ public disclosure should be
    strictly curtailed.
    Given the serious privacy concerns and potential harm
    stemming from SSN dissemination, Virginia’s asserted inter-
    est in protecting individual privacy by limiting SSNs’ public
    disclosure may certainly constitute "a state interest of the
    highest order." Daily 
    Mail, 443 U.S. at 103
    . We need not ulti-
    mately decide that question, however, because our holding
    below regarding narrow-tailoring suffices to resolve the con-
    stitutional challenge. We discussed this issue merely to pro-
    vide guidance to the district court fashioning injunctive relief
    on remand. See Elm Grove Coal Co. v. Dir., O.W.C.P. , 
    480 F.3d 278
    , 299 n.20 (4th Cir. 2007) ("We choose to address
    this discovery issue because it is likely to arise on remand.");
    28                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    Charbonnages de France v. Smith , 
    597 F.2d 406
    , 417 (4th
    Cir. 1979) ("[I]t may be appropriate to address a few points
    presented on this appeal that, although not dispositive here,
    could arise as important issues on remand.").
    2.
    We next consider whether enforcing section 59.1-443.2
    against Ostergren would be narrowly tailored to Virginia’s
    asserted interest in preserving individual privacy by protect-
    ing SSNs from public disclosure. Supreme Court precedent
    imposes a stringent standard regarding narrow-tailoring. Cox
    Broadcasting and its progeny indicate that punishing truthful
    publication of private information will almost never be nar-
    rowly tailored to safeguard privacy when the government
    itself released that information to the press. See Cox Broad. ,
    420 U.S. at 496 ("Once true information is disclosed in public
    court documents open to public inspection, the press cannot
    be sanctioned for publishing it."); Florida Star , 491 U.S. at
    534 ("Where information is entrusted to the government, a
    less drastic means than punishing truthful publication almost
    always exists for guarding against the dissemination of private
    facts."). Even where disclosure to the press was accidental,
    Florida Star indicates that the press cannot be prevented from
    publishing the private information. In that case, B.J.F.’s iden-
    tity was disclosed to the press accidentally despite the police
    department’s policy against revealing rape victims’ names.
    The Supreme Court nonetheless concluded that "[w]here . . .
    the government has failed to police itself in disseminating
    information, it is clear under Cox Broadcasting , Oklahoma
    Publishing, and Landmark Communications that the imposi-
    tion of damages against the press for its subsequent publica-
    tion can hardly be said to be a narrowly tailored means of
    safeguarding anonymity." Florida 
    Star, 491 U.S. at 538
    .
    In both Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star , the govern-
    ment disclosed private information to the press and thereafter
    sought to prevent media outlets from truthfully publishing that
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                             29
    information. This case appears similar in that Virginia like-
    wise disclosed public records containing private information
    to Ostergren and now seeks to prevent her from publishing
    them online. Because Virginia "failed to police itself in dis-
    seminating information," Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star
    suggest that preventing Ostergren from publishing those
    records could almost never be narrowly tailored. 
    Id. Accord- ing
    to their stringent standard, Ostergren could never be pro-
    hibited from publicizing SSN-containing Virginia land
    records she already lawfully obtained (including those posted
    on her website),13 and Virginia would need to redact all origi-
    nal land records available from courthouses (not merely digi-
    tal copies available through secure remote access) before
    Ostergren could be prohibited from publishing SSN-
    containing Virginia land records she might later obtain.14
    13
    Whereas Ostergren posted online only about 30 records from various
    States, her testimony indicates she obtained thousands of other public
    records containing unredacted SSNs.
    14
    The district court was justifiably concerned about reaching this
    extreme conclusion. When Ostergren maintained that under Cox Broad-
    casting she could continue publicizing additional SSNs until Virginia fin-
    ished redacting all original land records and digital copies, the court
    responded,
    [I]f I understand it correctly, under the relief you want, she can
    go to the record, she can take thousands or hundreds of thou-
    sands, whatever is there, and publish them, and if she thinks that
    20 names have shock value, what do you think her attitude might
    be toward publishing thousands or hundreds of thousands?
    J.A. 192. Ostergren replied,
    It is relief I want, and I wish I could tell you a principled way to
    make it narrower, but I can’t think of one, and I think that the
    Cox court struck the balance between privacy and free speech in
    the context of public records, and the way that they struck the
    balance was to hold that when the Government makes something
    available, they are responsible for controlling the dissemination
    of information. They can’t make someone else do it.
    J.A. 193. The court responded again,
    30                      OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    Despite apparent similarities, however, the instant case also
    differs from Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star in two criti-
    cal respects that warrant consideration because they impact
    our narrow-tailoring analysis. First, this case implicates a dif-
    ferent conception of privacy—one predicated upon control of
    personal information rather than secrecy. Second, Virginia’s
    knowledge about and practical control over the private infor-
    mation here differs significantly from the situations involved
    in Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star . Given these differ-
    ences, this case requires a more nuanced analysis than that
    suggested above.15 We consider each difference separately
    below and then discuss the proper narrow-tailoring analysis.
    a.
    Cox Broadcasting involved Georgia’s tort of public disclo-
    sure of private information, in which "the plaintiff claims the
    right to be free from unwanted publicity about his private
    affairs, which, although wholly true, would be offensive to a
    person of ordinary sensibilities." Cox 
    Broad., 420 U.S. at 489
    .
    [W]hat if accidentally the Social Security Administration, some-
    body went in and released all the Social Security numbers in the
    country? Are you saying that Congress couldn’t come in with a
    statute and say, you can’t replicate these things? What they
    would do is try to take the system that had gone wrong, fix what
    they can fix, knowing that there are people who have already got-
    ten into the database that spilled accidentally, but knowing the
    damage is somewhat limited and saying we are going to stop it
    right here, and the way we’re going to stop it is making it unlaw-
    ful for you, anybody, to take this information that’s been acciden-
    tally spilled and use it.
    J.A. 193. We share the district court’s concern and consider below how
    the instant case may be distinguished from Cox Broadcasting and Florida
    Star regarding narrow-tailoring.
    15
    We are distinguishing Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star merely with
    regard to the proper narrow-tailoring analysis, not with regard to whether
    the Daily Mail standard applies.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                             31
    This cause of action "define[s] and protect[s] an area of pri-
    vacy free from unwanted publicity in the press." 
    Id. at 491.
    "[T]he gravamen of the claimed injury is the publication of
    information, whether true or not, the dissemination of which
    is embarrassing or otherwise painful to an individual." 
    Id. at 489.
    Florida Star involved the same privacy interest. B.J.F.
    suffered emotional distress because the fact that she had been
    raped, information she had hoped to keep secret, had been
    widely publicized. See Florida 
    Star, 491 U.S. at 528
    ("B.J.F.
    testified that she had suffered emotional distress from the
    publication of her name.").
    Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star thus involved a particu-
    lar conception of privacy whereby "private" matters are those
    one would prefer to keep hidden from other people because
    disclosure would be embarrassing or compromising.16 See
    Whalen v. Roe , 
    429 U.S. 589
    , 598-99 (1977) (noting cases
    protecting "privacy" that involved "the individual interest in
    avoiding disclosure of personal matters"). Under this concep-
    tion, one’s privacy interest hinges upon whether information
    has been kept secret, and protecting privacy involves ensuring
    that people can keep personal matters secret or hidden from
    public scrutiny. See Daniel J. Solove, Conceptualizing
    16
    The Seventh Circuit has explored the human desire for secrecy about
    certain personal matters:
    Even people who have nothing rationally to be ashamed of can
    be mortified by the publication of intimate details of their life.
    Most people in no wise deformed or disfigured would neverthe-
    less be deeply upset if nude photographs of themselves were pub-
    lished in a newspaper or a book. They feel the same way about
    photographs of their sexual activities, however "normal," or
    about a narrative of those activities, or about having their medical
    records publicized. Although it is well known that every human
    being defecates, no adult human being in our society wants a
    newspaper to show a picture of him defecating. The desire for
    privacy illustrated by these examples is a mysterious but deep
    fact about human personality.
    Haynes v. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. , 
    8 F.3d 1222
    , 1229 (7th Cir. 1993).
    32                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    Privacy, 
    90 Cal. L
    . Rev. 1087, 1105 (2002) ("One of the most
    common understandings of privacy is that it constitutes the
    secrecy of certain matters. Under this view, privacy is vio-
    lated by the public disclosure of previously concealed infor-
    mation."). Because this conception of privacy presupposes
    secrecy, personal matters that have been publicly disclosed
    can no longer be considered private. See 
    id. at 1107
    ("[T]he
    view of privacy as secrecy often leads to the conclusion that
    once a fact is divulged in public, no matter how limited or
    narrow the disclosure, it can no longer remain private."). For
    example, the Supreme Court embraced this reasoning in
    Fourth Amendment cases indicating that one’s "reasonable
    expectation of privacy" cannot encompass anything exposed
    to the public or third parties. See California v. Greenwood ,
    
    486 U.S. 35
    , 40 (1988) (finding no reasonable expectation of
    privacy in garbage because "plastic garbage bags left on or at
    the side of a public street are readily accessible to animals,
    children, scavengers, snoops, and other members of the pub-
    lic"); United States v. Miller , 
    425 U.S. 435
    , 442 (1976) (find-
    ing no reasonable expectation of privacy in personal financial
    documents held by banks because "the documents obtained,
    including financial statements and deposit slips, contain only
    information voluntarily conveyed to the banks and exposed to
    their employees in the ordinary course of business").
    The instant case involves a different conception of privacy
    not predicated upon secrecy. Cox Broadcasting and Florida
    Star addressed the privacy concern that disclosing certain per-
    sonal matters (information one had hoped to keep secret)
    might cause embarrassment or reputational damage. But peo-
    ple do not feel embarrassed when asked to provide their SSN;
    nor do they fear that their reputation will suffer when others
    find out that number. People worry only about how their SSN
    will be used—more specifically, about whether some unscru-
    pulous person will steal their identity. The Fifth Circuit made
    this same observation:
    [A]n individual’s informational privacy interest in
    his or her SSN is substantial. The privacy concern at
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                         33
    issue is not, of course, that an individual will be
    embarrassed or compromised by the particular SSN
    that she has been assigned. Rather, the concern is
    that the simultaneous disclosure of an individual’s
    name and confidential SSN exposes that individual
    to a heightened risk of identity theft and other forms
    of fraud.
    Sherman v. U.S. Dep’t of the Army , 
    244 F.3d 357
    , 365 (5th
    Cir. 2001); see also Nat’l Cable & Telecomms. Ass’n v. FCC ,
    
    555 F.3d 996
    , 1001 (D.C. Cir. 2009) ("[W]e do not agree that
    the interest in protecting customer privacy is confined to pre-
    venting embarrassment . . . ."). Accordingly, this case
    involves a particular conception of privacy whereby one does
    not mind publicity itself but nonetheless would prefer to con-
    trol how personal information will be used or handled. Under
    this conception, privacy does not hinge upon secrecy but
    instead involves "the individual’s control of information con-
    cerning his or her person." Nat’l Cable & Telecomms. Ass’n ,
    555 F.3d at 1001 (emphasis added and internal quotations
    omitted).
    This difference affects our narrow-tailoring analysis
    because Cox Broadcasting ’s holding stemmed from the con-
    ception of privacy predicated upon secrecy. The Supreme
    Court noted that Georgia’s tort of public disclosure of private
    information provided no remedy where the disclosed informa-
    tion was already publicly available. See Restatement (Second)
    of Torts § 652D cmt. b ("There is no liability when the defen-
    dant merely gives further publicity to information about the
    plaintiff that is already public."). The Court thus concluded
    that "the interests in privacy fade when the information
    involved already appears on the public record." Cox Broad. ,
    420 U.S. at 494-95. This makes sense where privacy hinges
    upon secrecy because publicly accessible information could
    not be considered private anymore and any emotional distress
    resulting from disclosure would likely have already occurred.17
    17
    The emotional distress that a rape victim experiences because of pub-
    lic disclosure of her identity occurs the moment she discovers that others
    34                    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    But the reasoning makes noticeably less sense where privacy
    hinges upon control. Whereas emotional distress resulting
    from disclosure occurs only once when one discovers the pub-
    licity, publicly accessible SSNs could be misused repeatedly
    over time until they become less easily accessed. Further-
    more, because SSNs are more easily accessed online than in
    bound original land records, people worried about preventing
    identity theft (rather than embarrassment) would indeed have
    a considerable privacy interest against "merely giv[ing] fur-
    ther publicity." Restatement (Second) of Torts § 652D cmt. b.
    The Supreme Court employed similar reasoning in United
    States Department of Justice v. Reporters Committee for
    Freedom of the Press , 
    489 U.S. 749
    (1989). In that case,
    reporters filed requests under the Freedom of Information
    Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552, for criminal identification records,
    known as "rap sheets," that the Federal Bureau of Investiga-
    tion had created by collecting biographical data and criminal
    history found in different state and local public records. The
    government refused to disclose these rap sheets based on the
    statutory exception for "records or information compiled for
    law enforcement purposes . . . the production of [which] . . .
    could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted
    invasion of personal privacy." 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(C). Argu-
    ing that this exception was inapplicable, the reporters rea-
    soned that "[b]ecause events summarized in a rap sheet have
    been previously disclosed to the public . . . [the] privacy inter-
    est in avoiding disclosure of a federal compilation of these
    events approaches zero." Reporters 
    Comm., 489 U.S. at 762
    -
    63. The Supreme Court expressly rejected this "cramped
    notion of personal privacy" and expounded as follows:
    [T]he common law and the literal understandings of
    privacy encompass the individual’s control of infor-
    know her secret. The harm feared by someone whose SSN has been dis-
    closed, however, does not occur upon disclosure but rather upon the mis-
    use of that information.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                   35
    mation concerning his or her person. In an organized
    society, there are few facts that are not at one time
    or another divulged to another. Thus the extent of the
    protection accorded a privacy right at common law
    rested in part on the degree of dissemination of the
    allegedly private fact and the extent to which the
    passage of time rendered it private.
    
    Id. at 763.
    The Court then observed that "there is a vast differ-
    ence between the public records that might be found after a
    diligent search of courthouse files, county archives, and local
    police stations throughout the country and a computerized
    summary located in a single clearinghouse of information."
    
    Id. at 764.
    In another case, the Court reiterated what this anal-
    ysis makes clear: "An individual’s interest in controlling the
    dissemination of information regarding personal matters does
    not dissolve simply because that information may be available
    to the public in some form." U.S. Dep’t of Def. v. Fed. Labor
    Relations Auth., 
    510 U.S. 487
    , 500 (1994).
    b.
    The instant case also differs in another respect from Cox
    Broadcasting and Florida Star regarding narrow-tailoring.
    There, the Supreme Court held that punishing truthful publi-
    cation of private information was not narrowly tailored
    because the government could have initially refused to dis-
    close that information to the press. This rationale assumes that
    the government could have easily prevented initial disclosure.
    See Florida 
    Star, 491 U.S. at 538
    ("[W]here the government
    itself provides information to the media, it is most appropriate
    to assume that the government had, but failed to utilize, far
    more limited means of guarding against dissemination than
    the extreme step of punishing truthful speech."). That assump-
    tion does not fully apply in this case.
    Both Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star involved situa-
    tions in which a government employee created the document
    36                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    containing sensitive information that was later disclosed.
    Thus, initial disclosure could have been avoided by not
    recording the information or sealing the document from the
    outset. In Florida Star , the Court recognized that the police
    officer who prepared the incident report could have simply
    omitted B.J.F.’s name. See 
    id. Likewise, in
    Cox Broadcasting,
    the government could have omitted the victim’s name from its
    indictments or placed them under seal. See Cox Broad. , 420
    U.S. at 496 ("If there are privacy interests to be protected in
    judicial proceedings, the States must respond by means which
    avoid public documentation or other exposure of private
    information.").
    This appeal presents a quite different situation. For the
    most part, private attorneys (rather than the government) were
    responsible for creating real estate documents containing peo-
    ple’s SSNs and then submitting those documents for record-
    ing in Virginia. The clerk of court could have inspected these
    documents before recording them and redacted any SSNs, but
    even this solution differs from Cox Broadcasting and Florida
    Star, where the government did not have to search for the sen-
    sitive information needing redaction. Given that every year
    hundreds of thousands of documents are submitted for record-
    ing in Virginia, inspecting each one would have been no small
    undertaking. Most importantly, however, attorneys began fil-
    ing documents containing SSNs long before Virginia could
    have been expected to comprehend the current threat of iden-
    tity theft. For this reason, we find inapplicable Cox Broad-
    casting’s observation that "[b]y placing the information in the
    public domain on official court records, the State must be pre-
    sumed to have concluded that the public interest was thereby
    being 
    served." 420 U.S. at 495
    .
    Virginia currently prohibits attorneys from submitting real
    estate documents for recording that contain unredacted SSNs.
    See Va. Code § 17.1-227. Given the historical circumstances,
    however, clerks of court still possess millions of land records,
    over three percent of which probably contain unredacted
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                         37
    SSNs. Inspecting all these records to find and redact SSNs
    would be far more burdensome than sealing indictments and
    police reports revealing rape victims’ identities. Moreover,
    clerks cannot place original land records under seal while
    completing such redaction because people must inspect them
    to verify who owns what during real estate transactions. See
    Va. Code § 17.1-208 (requiring that "any records and papers
    of every circuit court that are maintained by the clerk of the
    circuit court shall be open to inspection by any person"). Fur-
    thermore, regarding land records available through secure
    remote access, the parties agree that running software used for
    redacting SSNs costs about four cents per page and has a one
    to five percent error rate. Virginia thus faces considerable
    obstacles in avoiding initial disclosure of sensitive informa-
    tion that Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star did not have to
    consider. Such realities plainly must factor into our narrow-
    tailoring analysis.
    c.
    The factual differences between this case and Cox Broad-
    casting and Florida Star suggest the need for a more nuanced
    analytical approach to the Daily Mail standard’s narrow-
    tailoring requirement. The Supreme Court’s recognition of
    different conceptions of privacy—one focused upon secrecy
    and incompatible with any disclosure, the other focused upon
    control and consistent with limited disclosure—and the unre-
    alistic challenge of preserving total secrecy in this situation
    strongly suggest that Virginia should have more latitude to
    limit disclosure of land records containing unredacted SSNs
    than Cox Broadcasting and Florida Star allowed for protect-
    ing rape victims’ anonymity. Specifically, the Court’s First
    Amendment jurisprudence does not necessarily require that
    Virginia redact SSNs from all original land records main-
    tained in courthouse archives before someone like Ostergren
    may be prevented from publishing them online.18 Ostergren’s
    18
    Ostergren took the contrary position below, arguing that all original
    land records had to be redacted before Virginia could prevent Ostergren
    38                     OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    website supports this conclusion by recognizing the critical
    difference between original land records available from court-
    houses and digital land records available through secure
    remote access:
    Once records are recorded at the courthouse, they
    become public (unless sealed by a judge) and anyone
    can get them. But shouldn’t we all have to drive to
    the Courthouse to see them? Yes, but sadly that is
    not the case anymore. Legislators have kowtowed to
    special interests and in VA, they voted specifically
    to allow these records online.
    The Virginia Watchdog, http://www.opcva.com/watchdog/
    RECORDS.html (last visited Apr. 26, 2010) (emphasis omit-
    ted); see Reporters Comm. , 489 U.S. at 764 (noting "a vast
    difference between the public records that might be found
    after a diligent search of courthouse files, county archives,
    and local police stations throughout the country and a com-
    puterized summary located in a single clearinghouse of infor-
    mation").
    This certainly does not mean, however, that enforcing sec-
    tion 59.1-443.2 against Ostergren would be constitutional. We
    cannot conclude that prohibiting Ostergren from posting pub-
    lic records online would be narrowly tailored to protecting
    individual privacy when Virginia currently makes those same
    records available through secure remote access without hav-
    ing redacted SSNs. The record reflects that 15 clerks of court
    have not finished redacting SSNs from their land records,
    from publishing SSNs online. See J.A. 120 ("Well, I think that the consti-
    tutional argument would still be solid even if the records were not avail-
    able online, because they are open to anyone who wishes to see them.").
    But suspending access to courthouse archives until Virginia completed
    such an enormous redaction effort—requiring manual inspection of over
    200 million physical documents—seems impossible because people
    require access to land records for any real estate transaction.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                          39
    which are nonetheless available online. Under Cox Broadcast-
    ing and its progeny, the First Amendment does not allow Vir-
    ginia to punish Ostergren for posting its land records online
    without redacting SSNs when numerous clerks are doing pre-
    cisely that.19 Cf. Florida 
    Star, 491 U.S. at 535
    ("[W]here the
    government has made certain information publicly available,
    it is highly anomalous to sanction persons other than the
    source of its release."). Virginia could curtail SSNs’ public
    disclosure much more narrowly by directing clerks not to
    make land records available through secure remote access
    until after SSNs have been redacted.20
    In summary, Virginia’s failure to redact SSNs before plac-
    ing land records online means that barring Ostergren’s pro-
    tected speech would not be narrowly tailored to Virginia’s
    interest in protecting individual privacy. For this reason, we
    hold that enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against Ostergren for
    the Virginia land records posted on her website would violate
    the First Amendment. We thus affirm the district court’s
    August 22, 2008, decision.
    19
    For the same reason, Virginia could not punish Ostergren for publish-
    ing a SSN-containing land record that had accidentally been overlooked
    during its imperfect redaction process—having a one to five percent error
    rate—unless Virginia had first corrected that error. Even then, we leave
    open whether under such circumstances the Due Process Clause would not
    preclude Virginia from enforcing section 59.1-443.2 without first giving
    Ostergren adequate notice that the error had been corrected.
    20
    Although suspending secure remote access until the redaction process
    has ended would certainly make enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against
    Ostergren more narrowly tailored, we leave open whether this safeguard
    alone would be adequate under the Daily Mail standard. Once a greater
    factual record has been developed on remand, the district court in fashion-
    ing injunctive relief should consider whether other safeguards are also
    constitutionally required. See, e.g. , Florida Star , 491 U.S. at 534 ("The
    government may classify certain information, establish and enforce proce-
    dures ensuring its redacted release, and extend a damages remedy against
    the government or its officials where the government’s mishandling of
    sensitive information leads to its dissemination.").
    40                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    III.
    We next consider Ostergren’s challenge to the district
    court’s award of injunctive relief. "We review an order grant-
    ing an injunction for an abuse of discretion, reviewing factual
    findings for clear error and legal conclusions de novo." Muff-
    ley ex rel. NLRB v. Spartan Mining Co. , 
    570 F.3d 534
    , 543
    (4th Cir. 2009). The court entered
    a permanent injunction . . . against enforcement of
    Va. Code § 59.1-443.2 against any iteration of Oster-
    gren’s website, now or in the future, that simply
    republishes publicly obtainable documents contain-
    ing unredacted SSNs of Virginia legislators, Vir-
    ginia Executive Officers or Clerks of Court as part as
    [sic] an effort to reform Virginia law and practice
    respecting the publication of SSNs online.
    
    Ostergren, 643 F. Supp. 2d at 770
    (emphasis added). Oster-
    gren claims this relief was too limited. Because her website
    includes documents obtained from various States’ websites
    revealing SSNs of non-Virginia public officials, Ostergren
    contends that the injunction should have reached not only
    "Virginia legislators, Virginia Executive Officers or Clerks of
    Court" but also other public officials anywhere in the United
    States. 
    Id. A. When
    Ostergren raised this issue below during a hearing
    about the propriety and scope of injunctive relief, counsel for
    the Attorney General stated that section 59.1-443.2 did not
    reach non-Virginia public records and that, regardless, the
    Attorney General would not prosecute Ostergren for publish-
    ing such documents. Because the issue had never been dis-
    puted, even prior to litigation, the district court declined to
    decide the question because that would "become[] an advisory
    opinion." J.A. 301-02. In essence, the court concluded that
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                     41
    Ostergren failed to provide a case or controversy sufficient to
    trigger federal judicial power. See Richmond Med. Ctr. For
    Women v. Herring, 
    570 F.3d 165
    , 172 (2009) ("Article III . . .
    extends the jurisdiction of courts only to cases and controver-
    sies, thus precluding courts from issuing advisory opinions
    . . . .").
    The precise issue the district court passed over was whether
    the First Amendment prohibits Virginia from enforcing sec-
    tion 59.1-443.2 against Ostergren for publishing on her web-
    site public records that contain unredacted SSNs but were
    obtained from other States’ websites. Before entertaining
    Ostergren’s argument about this, we consider our own juris-
    diction to decide that question. See Friedman’s, Inc. v. Dun-
    lap, 
    290 F.3d 191
    , 197 (4th Cir. 2002) ("[T]he question of
    whether we are presented with a live case or controversy is a
    question we may raise sua sponte .").
    Article III gives federal courts jurisdiction only over
    "Cases" or "Controversies." U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 1. Our
    judicial power may be exercised only where "‘conflicting
    contentions of the parties . . . present a real, substantial con-
    troversy between parties having adverse legal interests, a dis-
    pute definite and concrete, not hypothetical or abstract.’"
    Miller v. Brown , 
    462 F.3d 312
    , 316 (4th Cir. 2006) (quoting
    Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat’l Union , 
    442 U.S. 289
    ,
    298 (1979)). From this requirement courts developed the doc-
    trine of ripeness. "[I]ts basic rationale is to prevent the courts,
    through avoidance of premature adjudication, from entangling
    themselves in abstract disagreements . . . ." Abbott Labs. v.
    Gardner, 
    387 U.S. 136
    , 148 (1967). We assess ripeness by
    "balanc[ing] the fitness of the issues for judicial decision with
    the hardship to the parties of withholding court consider-
    ation." 
    Miller, 462 F.3d at 319
    (internal quotations omitted).
    Because "[t]he doctrine of ripeness prevents judicial consider-
    ation of issues until a controversy is presented in clean-cut
    and concrete form," 
    id. at 318-19
    (internal quotations omit-
    ted), "problems such as the inadequacy of the record . . . or
    42                 OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    ambiguity in the record . . . will make a case unfit for adjudi-
    cation on the merits," Scott v. Pasadena Unified Sch. Dist. ,
    
    306 F.3d 646
    , 662 (9th Cir. 2002) (internal quotations omit-
    ted).
    Ostergren developed almost no evidentiary record to
    inform our decision about the issue raised. The record does
    not indicate from which States’ websites she obtained public
    records containing unredacted SSNs, whether those records
    had previously been publicly disclosed, or how these States
    protected SSNs from public disclosure. We have only a stipu-
    lation that her website "includes public records obtained from
    government websites in other states." J.A. 86. We cannot
    imagine how any court could decide the question now pre-
    sented with such a paltry evidentiary record, particularly
    given the fact-intensive inquiry required by Cox Broadcasting
    and its progeny. Ostergren also failed to develop any legal
    theory explaining why our First Amendment analysis about
    Virginia’s land records should also encompass public records
    from other States. Her attorney admitted at oral argument, "I
    have not found a satisfactory answer to that question."
    Finally, thus far the Attorney General does not believe that
    section 59.1-443.2 would reach non-Virginia public records,
    and seems opposed to prosecuting Ostergren for publishing
    such documents. In short, we have no evidence, no argument,
    and no underlying dispute for the thorny constitutional ques-
    tion that Ostergren has raised. We therefore also have no
    jurisdiction to decide that question. See California Bankers
    Ass’n v. Shultz , 
    416 U.S. 21
    , 64 (1974) ("Passing upon the
    possible significance of the manifold provisions of a broad
    statute in advance of efforts to apply the separate provisions
    is analogous to rendering an advisory opinion upon a statute
    or a declaratory judgment upon a hypothetical case." (internal
    quotations omitted)).
    B.
    Although we decline to consider whether the First Amend-
    ment prohibits Virginia from enforcing section 59.1-443.2
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                     43
    against Ostergren for publishing non-Virginia public records
    containing unredacted SSNs, that does not moot Ostergren’s
    cross-appeal. We therefore proceed to consider whether the
    district court abused its discretion by entering a permanent
    injunction that protected only "republish[ing] publicly obtain-
    able documents containing unredacted SSNs of Virginia legis-
    lators, Virginia Executive Officers or Clerks of Court as part
    as [sic] an effort to reform Virginia law and practice respect-
    ing the publication of SSNs online." Ostergren, 
    643 F. Supp. 2d
    at 770.
    While district courts have broad discretion when fashioning
    injunctive relief, their powers are not boundless. "Once a con-
    stitutional violation is found, a federal court is required to tai-
    lor the scope of the remedy to fit the nature and extent of the
    constitutional violation." Dayton Bd. of Educ. v. Brinkman ,
    
    433 U.S. 406
    , 420 (1977) (internal quotations omitted); see
    Missouri v. Jenkins , 
    515 U.S. 70
    , 88 (1995) ("[T]he nature of
    the . . . remedy is to be determined by the nature and scope
    of the constitutional violation." (internal quotations omitted)).
    Because we found that enforcing section 59.1-443.2 against
    Ostergren for the Virginia land records posted on her website
    violated the First Amendment under Cox Broadcasting and its
    progeny, we must consider whether the district court’s injunc-
    tive relief was tailored to fit that violation. We are mindful
    that "[w]hile a remedy must be narrowly tailored, that require-
    ment does not operate to remove all discretion from the Dis-
    trict Court in its construction of a remedial decree." United
    States v. Paradise , 
    480 U.S. 149
    , 185 (1987).
    The district court tried "to frame a remedial injunction that
    . . . accommodate[s] the First Amendment rights of Ostergren
    and, at the same time, affords some protection to the innocent
    members of the public who have no control of the release of
    the public records containing their SSNs." Ostergren, 643 F.
    Supp. 2d at 769. Although we commend the court’s conscien-
    tious effort to find minimally disruptive equitable relief, we
    conclude that its injunction was not tailored "to fit the nature
    44                    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    and extent of [Virginia’s] constitutional violation." 
    Brinkman, 433 U.S. at 420
    (internal quotations omitted). The following
    examples are illustrative.
    First, the injunction does not protect Ostergren in publish-
    ing Virginia land records containing private individuals’
    SSNs. Under our First Amendment analysis, Ostergren’s con-
    stitutional right to publish Virginia land records containing
    unredacted SSNs does not depend on the political status of
    people whose SSNs are compromised. Therefore, restricting
    injunctive relief to "the SSN-containing records of State legis-
    lators, State Executive Officers and Clerks of Court, those
    who actually can act to correct the problem," contradicts our
    First Amendment holding. 
    Id. at 770.
    The district court said
    that this limitation "largely only ratifies Ostergren’s current
    course of conduct and, as she herself stated, would not have
    a seriously deleterious effect on her public advocacy." 
    Id. But these
    circumstances do not justify ignoring the First Amend-
    ment. Furthermore, the record shows that Ostergren’s advo-
    cacy did involve private individuals’ SSNs. In June 2008, the
    clerk of court for Pulaski County, Arkansas, refused to
    remove land records from the Internet pending SSN redaction
    until Ostergren published land records showing several prom-
    inent local citizens’ SSNs.
    Second, the injunction does not protect Ostergren in pub-
    lishing Virginia land records that contain non-Virginia public
    officials’ SSNs.21 Many non-Virginia public officials conduct
    real estate transactions in Virginia and may have private
    information exposed in Virginia land records. For example,
    the record reflects that Ostergren published a land record from
    21
    Conversely, the injunction protects Ostergren in publishing non-
    Virginia public records containing Virginia public officials’ SSNs. As we
    have noted, however, the question of whether Virginia could enforce sec-
    tion 59.1-443.2 against Ostergren for publishing non-Virginia public
    records containing unredacted SSNs was not ripe for judicial consider-
    ation. See ante at III.A.
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                    45
    Fairfax County, Virginia, that contains General Colin Pow-
    ell’s unredacted SSN. Nothing in our First Amendment analy-
    sis justifies treating these records differently from other
    Virginia land records. Thus, even allowing the distinction
    between public and private individuals, the injunctive relief
    still does not adequately remedy Virginia’s constitutional vio-
    lation.
    For the reasons stated above, we conclude that the district
    court abused its discretion by not "tailor[ing] the scope of the
    remedy to fit the nature and extent of the constitutional viola-
    tion." 
    Brinkman, 433 U.S. at 420
    (internal quotations omit-
    ted); see United States v. Delfino , 
    510 F.3d 468
    , 470 (4th Cir.
    2007) ("A district court abuses its discretion when it . . . fails
    to consider judicially recognized factors constraining its exer-
    cise of discretion . . . ."). We thus reverse the district court’s
    June 2, 2009, decision and remand for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
    IV.
    We recognize that on remand the district court will require
    a more developed factual record to determine proper injunc-
    tive relief. This includes evidence about the status and effec-
    tiveness of Virginia’s current redaction efforts. Depending on
    the scope of section 59.1-443.2, this may also include evi-
    dence about non-Virginia public records that Ostergren would
    publish on her website. Because our constitutional analysis
    turned on how Virginia has handled public records rather than
    on whose SSNs are being exposed, the district court should
    frame the injunctive relief accordingly. The court should also
    heed Florida Star ’s warning "that the sensitivity and signifi-
    cance of the interests presented in clashes between First
    Amendment and privacy rights counsel relying on limited
    principles that sweep no more broadly than the appropriate
    context of the instant 
    case." 491 U.S. at 533
    .
    46                  OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI
    AFFIRMED IN PART,
    REVERSED IN PART,
    AND REMANDED
    DAVIS, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I am pleased to concur in the fine opinion of my good col-
    league. I write separately to elaborate my view of one issue,
    namely, the appropriate test for identifying and assessing in
    First Amendment cases the existence of "a state interest of the
    highest order."
    When evaluating whether a state’s asserted interest rises to
    the level shared by those of "the highest order," courts must
    consider and weigh heavily the state’s expressed views and its
    conduct or they risk denuding First Amendment rights. In
    Florida Star v. B.J.F., 
    491 U.S. 524
    , 537-38 (1989), the Court
    explained that Florida’s statute failed to further a state interest
    of the highest order for three reasons, the first of which was
    that the appellant obtained the identifying information in
    question from the government in consequence of official mis-
    handling of the information. 
    Id. at 538.
    This factor, combined
    with the breadth and facial underinclusiveness of Florida’s
    statute, led the Court to find "no such interest is satisfactorily
    served by imposing liability under [the statute] to appellant
    under the facts of this case." 
    Id. at 541.
    Considering a state’s view and its actual conduct is particu-
    larly important in First Amendment cases like this one, in
    which the Commonwealth, a party to the case, undertakes to
    punish an individual for re-publishing information initially
    published by the Commonwealth itself. In such cases, courts
    should not casually treat a "state interest of the highest order"
    synonymously with a judicially-noticeable, constitutionally-
    rooted, "compelling governmental interest," such as the eradi-
    cation of racial discrimination. See Maj. Op. at 23. Rather, the
    state’s dual role as publisher and re-publication punisher
    necessitates a more searching analysis of its involvement. For
    OSTERGREN v. CUCCINELLI                          47
    this reason, while I agree with the observation in the majority
    opinion that certain evolving "practices indicate a broad con-
    sensus that SSNs’ public disclosure should be strictly cur-
    tailed," Maj. Op. at 27, where, as here, an individual state has
    not manifested its genuine embrace of that "consensus," then
    judicially-noticed facts do not trump the state’s tangible
    actions, nor can they render the state’s behavior an unimpor-
    tant or minor aspect of the proper analysis.
    Thus, an analysis of a state’s view and its actual conduct in
    furthering its asserted interest is imperative in striking the
    proper balance, under the First Amendment, between pursuit
    of "a state interest of the highest order," on the one hand, and,
    on the other hand, the state’s efforts to restrict the exercise of
    constitutionally-protected expressive activity. This is not to
    say that "objective" data have no role to play in the analysis
    of a federal court’s assessment of whether an asserted state
    interest rises to become one "of the highest order." See Maj.
    Op. at 23. But such a consideration should not, and must not,
    supplant a fact-intensive inquiry into the state’s view and its
    actual conduct in furthering its asserted interest.*
    In sum, when a state seeks to punish a speaker for repub-
    lishing state-published information, the state should be
    expected, in the words of a contemporary colloquialism, not
    simply to talk the talk, but to walk the walk, as well. The dis-
    trict court did not err in so concluding here.
    *Butterworth v. Smith , 
    494 U.S. 624
    (1990), is not to the contrary.
    There, the Supreme Court held unconstitutional a Florida statute that pro-
    hibited a writer’s disclosure of his own grand jury testimony. 
    Id. at 626.
    In so holding, the Court considered whether other states maintain such a
    rule and whether the Federal Rules prohibited the writer’s actions. 
    Id. at 634-35.
    But of course, in Butterworth, the state never had control of the
    information in question: the writer’s testimony. Thus, the Court had scant
    reason to consider the actions of the state in safeguarding the information
    because the state never controlled the information in the first place.