Skip to main content
Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance

Our Work

Our Work

702 Spying

EFF Urges Supreme Court to Take On Unconstitutional NSA Surveillance, Reverse Dangerous Ruling That Allows Massive Government Spying Program

WASHINGTON, D.C.—The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) asked the Supreme Court to review and overturn an unprecedented ruling allowing the government to intercept, collect, and store—without a warrant—millions of Americans’ electronic communications, including emails, texts, phone calls, and online chats.

This warrantless surveillance is conducted by U.S. intelligence agencies...

Don’t Let Congress Compromise on Net Neutrality

A few months ago, we received confirmation of what many of us had feared: incoming Federal Communications Commission Chair Ajit Pai announced his plans to eliminate the clear, enforceable protections for net neutrality that the Commission had implemented in 2015.
Since then, people have stood up en masse in...

Privacy issue banner, a colorful graphical representation of a padlock

End Biometric Border Screening

This blog post was first published in The Hill on July 18, 2017.
This summer, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is expanding its program of subjecting U.S. and foreign citizens to facial recognition screening at international airports. This indiscriminate biometric surveillance program threatens the personal privacy...

EFF's 2016 Annual Report

At EFF, we keep very, very busy. Our past is invariably tangled with the present—long-running court cases that stretch on for years, and hard-won battles that it turns out we have to re-visit. We kicked off 2016 with a blast from the past—the latest salvo...

Thank you to our Summer Security Camp Donors!

Last month we wrapped up another successful summer membership drive. Thank you to everyone who participated in EFF’s Summer Security Camp! Whether it was sharing with your friends or helping us reach our match goal, you continue to make our work defending digital rights possible, and for that we are...

West Coast Jurisdictions Advance Community Oversight of Police Surveillance

This summer, two of the west coast’s largest metropolitan areas—Seattle and Los Angeles County—took major steps to curtail secret, unilateral surveillance by local police. These victories for transparency and community control lend momentum toward sweeping reforms pending across California, as well as congressional efforts to curtail unchecked surveillance by federal...

26th Annual Pioneer Awards

On September 14, we will be gathering to celebrate the work of the 2017 Pioneer Award winners: defender of global free expression Annie Game; first amendment champion Mike Masnick; and renowned whistleblower and transparency advocate Chelsea Manning. We are also thrilled to welcome this year’s keynote speaker, Emmy-nominated comedy writer...

E-commerce RCEP Chapter: Have Big Tech’s Demands Fizzled?

Post-Mortem of Asia-Pacific regional IGF Panel Discussing Trade Rules
Over the past month, trade officials of the ASEAN group of countries and its six biggest trading partners have been frantically working to finalize the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP). Expected to be ratified later this year, the RCEP is...

Security Education

Deciphering China’s VPN Ban

This weekend Apple took a dispiriting step in the policing of its Chinese mainland App store: the company removed several Virtual Private Network (VPN) applications that allowed users to circumvent the China’s extensive internet censorship apparatus. In effect, the company has once again aided the Chinese government in...

Pages

Back to top

JavaScript license information