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Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance

Commentary

Commentary

US Government Still Insisting It Can’t Be Sued Over Warrantless Wiretapping

Once again, the federal government is trying its hardest to prevent the courts from determining whether it has broken (or is still breaking) the law through the NSA’s wiretapping program.
For nearly four years, the Obama Administration has followed in the Bush administration’s footsteps, invoking national security and a...

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Congressional Witnesses Agree: Multistakeholder Processes Are Right for Internet Regulation

Yesterday morning, the House Subcommittee on Communications and Technology held a hearing on "International Proposals to Regulate the Internet," focusing on the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT), an important treaty-writing event set to take place in Dubai this December. The WCIT is organized by an UN agency...

A Review of Today's Important House Hearing on Warrantless Wiretapping and the FISA Amendments Act

This morning, the House Judiciary Committee held an important hearing on the FISA Amendments Act (FAA) and the scope of the NSA’s warrantless wiretapping program. The FAA, which gutted privacy protections governing the interception international phone calls and e-mail to and from the United States, is set to expire at...

Suspended Sentence Good News for Thai Webmaster Jiew, But the Threat to Freedom of Expression Remains

Imagine going to court and potentially facing prison time over someone else’s comment in your blog. Thai webmaster Chiranuch Premchaiporn, also known by her online handle Jiew, has been facing that reality since her October 2010 arrest for violating the intermediary liability provisions of the...

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Pakistan's 8-Hour Twitter Block Sparks Fears of Future Internet Censorship

Last week, a spokesman for the Pakistani Ministry of Information Technology announced that Pakistan was blocking access to Twitter because the site had not removed links to a competition on Facebook to post cartoon images of the Muslim prophet Mohammed. Why Twitter and not Facebook? The spokesman went on...

This Week In Transparency: Torture Evidence Stays Secret, WikiLeaks, and More Transparency Trouble for DOJ

ACLU loses FOIA Case Asking For Torture Evidence
In a disappointing ruling for government transparency advocates, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals held the government could keep secret “cables describing waterboarding; a photograph of a detainee, Abu Zubaydah, taken around the time that he was subjected to...

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Sorry We're Not Sorry: Interview with Lino Bocchini of Falha de S. Paulo

Lino and Mario Bocchini, creators of the Brazilian parody website Falha de São Paulo, are currently appealing a court order that froze their domain two years ago. In September 2010, Brazilian newspaper Folha de São Paulo filed a lawsuit against the Falha seeking financial compensation for mimicking their layout...

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