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EFFecting Change: If You Own It, Why Can't You Fix It? on July 23

As a Provider Fought a Secret Surveillance Order, Court Denied It Access to Relevant Law

The U.S. government’s foreign surveillance law is so secretive that not even a service provider challenging an order issued by a secret court got to access it.
That Kafkaesque episode—denying a party access to the law being used against it—was made public this week in a...

In response to EFF lawsuit, DOJ releases 18 new opinions of the FISC concerning Section 702

Last night, the Department of Justice produced eighteen previously secret opinions of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC). The opinions all relate to Section 702, the warrantless surveillance authority scheduled to sunset at the end of the year. The opinions were disclosed as a result of a FOIA lawsuit EFF...

Understanding Public, Closed, and Secret Facebook Groups

UPDATE: On August 14, 2019, Facebook changed privacy options for groups. See Facebook's announcement for more details, and refer to our Surveillance Self-Defense guide on reducing risks when using Facebook groups.There are as many different uses for Facebook groups as there are Facebook users, from sports leagues to...

In Response to EFF Lawsuit, Justice Department Scheduled to Release Significant FISC Opinions About Warrantless Surveillance

Tomorrow, the government is scheduled to release a group of significant opinions of the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court (FISC). The documents are being released as a result of a FOIA lawsuit filed by EFF last year, seeking disclosure of all of the FISC’s still-secret, yet significant, opinions.
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