Better Regulating Drone Use Requires Communication, Not Surveillance

In 2018, Congress gave the Departments of Justice and Homeland Security sweeping new authorities to destroy or commandeer privately-owned drones, as well as intercept the data it sends and receives. EFF objected to The Preventing Emerging Threats Act of 2018 (S. 2836, H.R. 6401) … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Spanish ISPs Fall Short of Robust Commitments to User Privacy in New Eticas’ Report

Spanish Internet Service Providers (ISPs) continue to fall short of robust transparency about their data protection and user privacy practices, with many failing to meet criteria  that directly builds on Spanish and EU data protection regulations. While highlighting that internet … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Alaa Abd El Fattah Surpasses 200 Days of Hunger Strike as COP27 Summit Nears

We remain gravely concerned about the deteriorating health of Alaa Abd El Fattah, the British-Egyptian activist, technologist, 2022 EFF Award winner, and Amnesty Prisoner of Conscience. Alaa has now been on hunger strike at Wadi el Natrun Prison in Egypt for more than 200 days, a … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Global Coalition Calls on UK Foreign Secretary to Secure the Release of Salma al-Shehab

15 October 2022 Dear Foreign Secretary, On behalf of the below signed organisations, we would like to congratulate your appointment as Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs. At a time of significant global uncertainty and unrest, the UK can and must … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

The Internet Is Not Facebook: Why Infrastructure Providers Should Stay Out of Content Policing

Cloudflare’s recent headline-making decision to refuse its services to KiwiFarms—a site notorious for allowing its users to wage harassment campaigns against trans people—is likely to lead to more calls for infrastructure companies to police online speech. Although EFF would shed … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

First Court in California Suppresses Evidence from Overbroad Geofence Warrant

A California trial court has held a geofence warrant issued to the San Francisco Police Department violated the Fourth Amendment and California’s landmark electronic communications privacy law, CalECPA. The court suppressed evidence stemming from the warrant, becoming the first c … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Digital Rights Updates with EFFector 34.5

Want the latest news on your digital rights? Well, you're in luck! Version 34, issue 5 of our EFFector newsletter is out now. Catch up on the latest EFF news by reading our newsletter or listening to the audio version below. This issue covers EFF's current work, including our inv … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Copyright Trolls Target Users in Brazil, Threatening Due Process and Data Protection Rights. Civil Society Groups Are There to Help

Copyright trolls typically don’t produce or distribute content, but instead make money off of copyrighted material by using the threat of litigation to shake down people who allegedly download movies and other content over the internet—a business model that invites harassment and … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Derechos Digitales Raises the Bar for Chilean ISPs' Privacy Commitments in New Report

Chile’s internet service providers (ISPs) have over the last five years improved transparency about how they protect their users’ data, thanks in large part to Latin American digital rights group Derechos Digitales shining a light on their practices through annual ¿Quien Defiende … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

A National Lab Is Promoting a "Digital Police Officer" Fantasy for Law Enforcement and Border Control

Researchers at a national laboratory are forecasting a future where police and border agents are assisted by artificial intelligence, not as a software tool but as an autonomous partner capable of taking the steering wheel during pursuits and scouring social media to target peopl … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Court’s Decision Upholding Disastrous Texas Social Media Law Puts The State, Rather Than Internet Users, in Control of Everyone’s Speech Online

The First Amendment and the freedom of speech and expression it provides has helped make the internet what it is today: a place for diverse communities, support networks, and forums of all stripes to share information and connect people. Individuals and groups exercise their cons … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Stop the Persecution: Iranian Authorities Must Immediately Release Technologists and Digital Rights Defenders

We, the undersigned human rights organizations, strongly condemn the Iranian authorities’ ruthless persecution, harassment, and arrest of technologists and digital rights defenders, and demand their immediate and unconditional release.  In an attempt to crush the popular uprising … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Snowflake Makes It Easy For Anyone to Fight Censorship

Tor, the onion router, remains one of the most effective censorship circumvention technologies. Millions of people use the Tor network every day to access the internet without fear of surveillance and censorship. Most people get on the Tor network by downloading the Tor Browser a … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

New Federal and State Court Rulings Show Courts are Divided on the Scope of Cell Phone Searches Post-Riley

This blog post was co-written with EFF Legal Intern Allie Schiele There is no dispute that cell phones contain a lot of personal information. The Supreme Court recognized in 2014 in Riley v. California that a cell phone is “not just another technological convenience. With all the … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Apple vs. Uniloc – Unsealed licensing table of patent troll

uniloc_-_unsealed_license_table.pdf | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

California Leads on Reproductive and Trans Health Data Privacy

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, anti-choice sheriffs and bounty hunters will try to investigate and punish abortion seekers based on their internet browsing, private messaging, and phone app location data. We can expect similar tactics from state officials who … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF to NJ court: Give defendants information regarding police use of facial recognition technology

We’ve all read the news stories: study after study shows that facial recognition algorithms are not always reliable, and that error rates spike significantly when involving faces of folks of color, especially Black women, as well as trans and nonbinary people. Yet this technology … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Victory! Court Unseals Records Showing Patent Troll’s Shakedown Efforts

EFF has prevailed in a years-long effort to make public a series of court records that show how a notorious patent troll, Uniloc, uses litigation threats to extracts payments from a variety of businesses. Uniloc earlier this month complied with a federal district court’s unsealin … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Google Loses Appeal Against EU's Record Antitrust fine, But Will Big Tech Ever Change?

The EU continues to crack down on big tech companies with its full arsenal of antitrust rules. This month, Google lost its appeal against a record fine, now slightly trimmed to €4.13 billion, for abusing its dominant position through the tactics it used to keep traffic on Android … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Automated License Plate Readers Threaten Abortion Access. Here's How Policymakers Can Mitigate the Risk

Over the last decade, a vast number of law enforcement agencies around the country have adopted a mass surveillance technology that uses cameras to track the vehicles of every driver on the road, with little thought or respect given to the ways this technology might be abused. No … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF urges FTC to address security and privacy problems in daycare and early education apps

An EFF study found the apps compromise young children’s data, and current laws don’t address the problem.SAN FRANCISCO—The Federal Trade Commission must review the lack of privacy and security protections among daycare and early education apps, the Electronic Frontier Foundation … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Google’s Perilous Plan for a Cloud Center in Saudi Arabia is an Irresponsible Threat to Human Rights

On August 9, a Saudi woman was sentenced to 34 years in prison by the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s notorious specialized criminal court in Riyadh. Her crime? Having a Twitter account and following and retweeting dissidents and activists. That same day, a federal jury in San Francisc … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Ban Government Use of Face Recognition In the UK

In 2015, Leicestershire Police scanned the faces of 90,000 individuals at a music festival in the UK and checked these images against a database of people suspected of crimes across Europe. This was the first known deployment of Live Facial Recognition (LFR) at an outdoor public … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Study of Electronic Monitoring Smartphone Apps Confirms Advocates’ Concerns of Privacy Harms

Researchers at the University of Washington and Harvard Law School recently published a groundbreaking study analyzing the technical capabilities of 16 electronic monitoring (EM) smartphone apps used as “alternatives” to criminal and civil detention. The study, billed as the “fir … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors Grants Police More Surveillance Powers

In a 4-7 vote, San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors passed a 15-month pilot program granting the San Francisco Police Department (SFPD) more live surveillance powers. This was despite the objections of a diverse coalition of community groups and civil rights organizations, reside … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Lawsuit: SMUD and Sacramento Police Violate State Law and Utility Customers’ Privacy by Sharing Data Without a Warrant

The public power utility and police racially profiled Asian communities in the illegal data-sharing scheme.SACRAMENTO—The Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) searches entire zip codes’ worth of people’s private data and discloses it to police without a warrant or any sus … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Interoperable Facebook

In this video, we discuss the forces that keep us using services like Facebook long after we stop enjoying them (hint, it's not because social media is "addictive") and we present a short "design fiction" explaining what it might be like to use social media in the near future, af … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

How to Ditch Facebook Without Losing Your Friends (Or Family, Customers or Communities)

Today, we launch “How to Ditch Facebook Without Losing Your Friends” - a narrated slideshow and essay explaining how Facebook locks in its users, how interoperability can free them, and what it would feel like to use an “interoperable Facebook” of the future, such as the one cont … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Giving Big Corporations “Closed Generic” Top-Level Domain Names to Run as Private Kingdoms Is Still a Bad Idea

No business can own the generic word for the product it sells. We would find it preposterous if a single airline claimed exclusive use of the word “air,” or a broadband service tried to stop its rivals from using the word “broadband.” Until this year, it seemed settled that the i … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF’s DEF CON 30 Puzzle—SOLVED

Puzzlemaster Aaron Steimle of the Muppet Liberation Front contributed to this post. Every year, EFF joins thousands of computer security professionals, tinkerers, and hobbyists for Hacker Summer Camp, the affectionate term used for the series of Las Vegas technology conferences i … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

It’s Time For A Federal Anti-SLAPP Law To Protect Online Speakers

Our country’s fair and independent courts exist to resolve serious disputes. Unfortunately, some parties abuse the civil litigation process to silence others’ speech, rather than resolve legitimate claims. These types of censorious lawsuits have been dubbed Strategic Lawsuits Aga … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Members of Congress Urge FTC to Investigate Fog Data Science

In the week since EFF and the Associated Press exposed how Fog Data Science purchases geolocation data on hundreds of millions of digital devices in the United States, and maps them for easy-to-use and cheap mass surveillance by police, elected officials have voiced serious conce … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

The Fight to Overturn FOSTA, an Unconstitutional Internet Censorship Law, Continues

More than four years after its enactment, FOSTA remains an unconstitutional law that broadly censored the internet and harmed sex workers and others by chilling their ability to speak, organize, and access information online. And the fight to overturn FOSTA continues. Last week, … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

San Francisco Police Must End Irresponsible Relationship with the Northern California Fusion Center

In yet another failure to follow the rules, the San Francisco Police Department is collaborating with the regional fusion center with nothing in writing—no agreements, no contracts, nothing— governing the relationship, according to new records released to EFF in its ongoing compl … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF’s “Cover Your Tracks” Will Detect Your Use of iOS 16’s Lockdown Mode

Apple’s new iOS 16 offers a powerful tool for its most vulnerable users. Lockdown Mode reduces the avenues attackers have to hack into users’ phones by disabling certain often-exploited features. While providing a solid defense against intrusion, it is also trivial to detect that … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

U.S. Federal Employees Can Take A Stand for Digital Freedoms

It’s that time of the year again when the weather starts to cool down and the leaves start to turn all different shades and colors. More importantly, it is also time for U.S. federal employees to pledge their support for digital freedoms through the Combined Federal Campaign (CFC … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF to California Governor: Protect Abortion Data Privacy

In the wake of the Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision, anti-choice sheriffs and bounty hunters will try to investigate and punish abortion seekers based on their internet browsing, private messaging, and phone app location data. Legislators must act now to protect this personal data. … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

VICTORY: Slack Offers Retention Settings to Free Workspaces

In a victory for users, Slack has fixed its long-standing retention problems for free workspaces. Instead of holding onto your messages on its servers for as long as your workspace exists, Slack is now giving free workspace admins the option to automatically delete all messages o … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

FTC Sues Location Data Broker

Phone app location data brokers are a growing menace to our privacy and safety. All you did was click a box while downloading an app. Now the app tracks your every move and sends it to a broker, which then sells your location data to the highest bidder. So three cheers for the Fe … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

EFF to Ninth Circuit: Social Media Content Moderation is Not "State Action"

Former EFF intern Shashank Sirivolu contributed to this blog post.   Social media users who have sued companies for deleting, demonetizing, and otherwise moderating their content have tried several arguments that this violates their constitutional rights. Courts have consistently … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Arizona Law Tramples People’s Constitutional Right to Record Police

EFF, two Arizona chapters of the National Lawyers Guild, Poder in Action, and Mass Liberation AZ filed a brief in federal court opposing the government's attempt to thwart police accountability.SAN FRANCISCO–A new Arizona law that bans people from recording videos within eig … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Honoring Peter Eckersley, Who Made the Internet a Safer Place for Everyone

With deep sadness, EFF mourns the loss of our friend, the technologist, activist, and cybersecurity expert Peter Eckersley. Peter worked at EFF for a dozen years and was EFF’s Chief Computer Scientist for many of those. Peter was a tremendous force in making the internet a safer … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Hollywood’s Insistence on New Draconian Copyright Rules Is Not About Protecting Artists

Stop us if you’ve heard these: piracy is driving artists out of business. The reason they are starving is because no one pays for things, just illegally downloads them. You wouldn’t steal a car. These arguments are old and being dragged back out to get support for rules that woul … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

How Ad Tech Became Cop Spy Tech

If a company wants to advertise something to you on the internet, it first has to know who you are and what you like to buy. There are many different approaches to gathering this data, but all generally have one goal in common: they link you with the data generated by your device … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Fog Revealed: A Guided Tour of How Cops Can Browse Your Location Data

In Part 1 of our series on Fog Data Science, we saw how when you give some apps permission to view your location, it can end up being packaged and sold to numerous other companies. Fog Data Science is one of those companies, and it has created a sleek search engine called Fog Rev … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

What is Fog Data Science? Why is the Surveillance Company so Dangerous?

An EFF investigation of public records acquired from dozens of state and local law enforcement agencies has uncovered a widely-used mass surveillance technology. Americans are accustomed to hearing about how the National Security Agency (NSA), the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

Fog Data Science Puts our Fourth Amendment Rights up for Sale

The data broker selling people’s location data to any local, state, and federal agency willing to buy it is putting our Fourth Amendment rights at risk. EFF recently published its investigation into Fog Data Science, which claims in marketing materials sent to law enforcement tha … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago

How Law Enforcement Around the Country Buys Cell Phone Location Data Wholesale

In Chino, CA, police used Fog Data Science’s geolocation service to do massive sweeps revealing who was near minor theft and burglary scenes. In a rural Missouri murder investigation, Fog’s service was used to track a babysitter who was never a suspect. In Greensboro, NC, a crime … | Continue reading


@eff.org | 2 years ago