Argentina Proposes a 100-Year-Plus Copyright Extension on Photography
Online Ad Company Adopts Do Not Track
Mass Surveillance: A Report Back From the Legal Front Line
On Wednesday, October 28, First Unitarian Church of Los Angeles will host a discussion featuring Cindy Cohn, EFF's Executive Director. A leading voice in the legal struggle to defend digital rights, Cindy has worked on First Amendment and privacy cases since 1993, when she served as the outside...
Tell Congress: CFAA is broken. Don’t make it worse.
Defending Against Overreaching Surveillance in Ethiopia: Surveillance Self-Defense now Available in Amharic
From telecommunications infrastructure to TV and radio airwaves, the Ethiopian government’s controls over communications infrastructure in the country means that even the most private and personal conversations may be exposed to unwarranted surveillance. In some cases, where communications have escaped the government’s strict monitoring system, human informers have been planted,...
France's Government Aims to Give Itself—and the NSA—Carte Blanche to Spy on the World
The United States makes an improper division between surveillance conducted on residents of the United States and the surveillance that is conducted with almost no restraint upon the rest of the world. This double standard has proved poisonous to the rights of Americans and non-Americans alike. In theory, Americans enjoy...
Forward and Back: Celebrating the 2015 Pioneer Awards
EFF's annual Pioneer Awards ceremony gives the digital civil liberties community a chance to honor the work of those who fight for online freedom through remarkable innovation, activism, journalism, or leadership. At this year's event...
Facebook’s Free Basics: More Open, Better Security, but Still a Walled Garden
Last Thursday, Facebook announced changes and clarifications to its zero-rating program formerly known as Internet.org. It’s re-branded the service “Free Basics,” but the overall idea remains the same: mobile users in developing nations can access certain websites without having to pay for the data, by accessing those websites via...
Tell President Obama: Save Crypto From Dangerous Backdoors
Tell President Obama: Save Crypto From Dangerous Backdoors
It's a critical moment in the global debate over privacy, security, and “backdoors” in encryption technology. Despite all that attention, President Obama has yet to come to a public position on backdoors—i.e., the government mandating, coercing, or pressuring companies to design their systems to give it special access to our...






