Skip to main content
EFFecting Change: How to Disenshittify the Internet on May 14

Deeplinks Blog

Deeplinks Blog

A Tale of Two Treaties: Marrakesh and Beijing Both Make Their Way to the Senate

The White House has submitted two copyright treaties to the Senate for ratification: the Marrakesh Treaty, which would improve access to copyrighted works for people with visual and print disabilities; and the Beijing Treaty, which could create a new layer of monopoly rights for the creators of audiovisual works. International...

Programming the Law: Privacy, Security, and Innovation

The symposium will focus on the latest developments in the US-EU Safe Harbor Framework, the roles of startups and businesses in the expansion of the Internet of Things into homes, and the evolving jurisprudence around the privacy right to anonymity. EFF Frank Stanton Legal Fellow Jamie Lee Williams will speak....

Let's Unlock the Set-Top Box--For Real

Imagine traveling back to 1996 in a typical American living room. What's changed? The TV is three feet thick and weighs 150 pounds. There’s a VHS videocassette recorder underneath, but no Internet-connected devices to be seen.
Now, what hasn't changed?
The cable or satellite tuner box. It’s a...

Security issues banner, a colorful graphic of two barrel keys forming an X

EFF to Support Apple in Encryption Battle

We learned on Tuesday evening that a U.S. federal magistrate judge ordered Apple to backdoor an iPhone that was used by one of the perpetrators of the San Bernardino shootings in December. Apple is fighting the order which would compromise the security of all its users around the world.
...

To Annoy or Not To Annoy: That Was The Question

Remembering One of the Original Constitutional Challenges to the CDA
Clinton Fein is South African born artist, writer, activist & social media strategist, best known for his Torture exhibition—photographic reenactments based on the notorious images from Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq—and his First Amendment victories. Fein resides in San...

White House Executive Order on Privacy Falls Short

This morning, the White House announced an Executive Order establishing a federal interagency privacy council composed of senior privacy officials from two dozen federal agencies. While seeming to offer some promise, however, the council has a limited mandate, and ultimately represents an overdue nod to privacy principles the administration...

Pages

Back to top

JavaScript license information