A proposal to set up a database of names that courts have kept secret has received cautious backing from lawyers, but the Law Society warns it could come with risks.
Justice Minister Andrew Little says he's asked officials to explore setting up a registry of court-issued suppression orders, after Google last year named the man accused of killing British backpacker Grace Millane.
The tech giant in December put the Auckland man's name into an email to Kiwi clients despite a ruling he could not be publicly identified and last week suspended its trending emails service in New Zealand.
Currently media have to usually be in court to hear a suppression order and there's no database to check what names are legally suppressed. Google says it didn't find out until four days after the fact.
But those who breach suppressions are still liable, regardless of whether they're aware of the orders.
The Law Society's Chris Macklin, a senior Crown prosecutor, said if a database could help with compliance of name suppressions, it seemed worth considering.