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

Commentary

Commentary

colorful letters on a black background spell out 2019: Year in Review

Smart Home Tech, Police, and Your Privacy: Year in Review 2019

If 2019 confirmed anything, it is that we should not trust the microphones and cameras that large corporations sell us to put inside and near our homes. Thanks to the due diligence of reporters, public records requesters, and privacy researchers and activists, consumers have been learning more and more about...

The Year We Fought to Get Net Neutrality Back: 2019 Year in Review

Ever since the FCC repealed net neutrality protections in 2017, we’ve been fighting to return as many protections to as many Americans as possible. In 2019, the battles in the courts and Congress both kept those committed to a free and open Internet very busy.Mozilla v. FCC Takes Center StageThe...

colorful letters on a black background spell out 2019: Year in Review

2019 in Review

In November’s landmark opinion in Alasaad v. McAleenan, a federal judge ruled that suspicionless electronic device searches at U.S. ports of entry violate the Fourth Amendment. The Alasaad opinion was the perfect way to end 2019—the culmination of two years of hard work by EFF, ACLU, and our 11 clients....

Surveillance Court to the FBI: You Have Some Explaining to Do

The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the normally-secretive federal court based in Washington, D.C. that oversees much of the nation’s foreign intelligence surveillance programs, took an unusual step yesterday: it issued a public order chastising the FBI for its handling of the applications submitted to conduct surveillance of Carter Page, a...

An abstract rube-goldberg machine with references to innovation and open culture

Mint: Late-Stage Adversarial Interoperability Demonstrates What We Had (And What We Lost)

In 2006, Aaron Patzer founded Mint. Patzer had grown up in the city of Evansville, Indiana—a place he described as "small, without much economic opportunity"—but had created a successful business building websites. He kept up the business through college and grad school and invested his profits in stocks and...

The shadow of a police officer looms in front of a Ring device on a closed door.

Five Senators Join the Fight to Learn Just How Bad Ring Really Is

Amid months of damaging investigative reporting and pressure by advocacy groups like EFF, senators are finally joining the fight to learn just how invasive and harmful Amazon’s Ring cameras are to the privacy of people in their vicinity.In September, after it had been revealed that over 400 police departments...

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