Skip to main content

Deeplinks Blog

Deeplinks Blog

They're Watching Us/We're Watching Them: Civil Liberities Online

Recent revelations of government surveillance and corporate data collection are only the latest episodes in an ongoing struggle over the content and meaning of our 'digital and informational civil liberties.' Surveillance and dataveillance have long been with us, but recent technological advancements and legal decisions have, without a doubt, raised...

Free Speech banner, an colorful graphic representation of a megaphone

Venezuela's Internet Crackdown Escalates into Regional Blackout

For the last month, Venezuela has been caught up in widespread protests against its government. The Maduro administration has responded by cracking down on what it claims as being foreign interference online. As that social unrest has escalated, the state's censorship has widened: from the removal of television stations from...

Techno-Activism Third Mondays (TA3M)

Rightscon Decompression and Review
This month, San Francisco hosted Rightscon, the human rights and technology conference organized by Access. We saw many familiar faces there, and thought we'd spend this week's meeting informally talking about lessons learned, questions raised, and what...

RightsCon Silicon Valley

This March 3-5 at Mission Bay Conference Center in San Francisco, Access is bringing the RightsCon summit back to Silicon Valley, where human rights experts, investors, corporate leaders, engineers, activists, and government representatives from around the world work to advance solutions to human rights challenges by concentrating on the possibilities...

Privacy issue banner, a colorful graphical representation of a padlock

Surveillance and Pressure Against WikiLeaks and Its Readers

The Intercept recently published an article and supporting documents indicating that the NSA and its British counterpart GCHQ surveilled and even sought to have other countries prosecute the investigative journalism website WikiLeaks. GCHQ also surveilled the millions of people who merely read the WikiLeaks website. The article clarifies the...

Pages

Back to top

JavaScript license information