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ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Run Privacy Upgrade- It's Time for Congress to Update ECPA

May 05, 2010
Today, the House Judiciary Subcommittee on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties is holding its first hearing to discuss the woefully outdated Electronic Communications Privacy Act. (Did we mention that it was written in 1986?!)The Fourth Amendment of the Constitution was designed to protect the privacy of our personal information. Unfortunately, innovation has far outpaced electroni... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Case

People v. Gallego

May 05, 2010

Should the police be able to follow you around and collect and analyze your DNA from something you discard, without a warrant or even a reason to believe you have committed a crime? 

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Police vehicle with a crowd in the background
Article

Gang Injunctions Fact Sheet

May 04, 2010
Gang injunctions raise a number of civil liberties concerns, both for specific, targeted individuals, as well as any community member who lives in or visits the designated area. Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
News

ACLU of Northern California to Disclose No on 8 Campaign Documents

Apr 28, 2010
After securing a key ruling regarding the First Amendment from the Ninth Circuit, the ACLU of Northern California (ACLU-NC) yesterday produced documents relating to its efforts to defeat Proposition 8. The ACLU had sought to appeal an order requiring it to produce its No on 8 documents, arguing that the First Amendment should cover communications between groups working together on a political caus... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

High School Essay Contest on Internet Privacy sponsored by ACLU-SCV

Apr 26, 2010
The ACLU of Northern California's Santa Clara Valley Chapter is holding an essay contest for high school students residing in or attending school in Campbell, Cupertino, Gilroy, Los Gatos, Milpitas, Monte Serano, Morgan Hill, San Jose, Santa Clara, Saratoga, or Sunnyvale.Find out more here. Please note, the deadline has been extended to May 15, 2010.You rely on the Internet to learn, share, shop, ... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Statistical Evidence That We Need a Privacy Law Upgrade

Apr 23, 2010
Two surveys caught our eye today. The surveys are on two different Internet privacy topics–location information and cloud computing–but both reveal how important it is that we reform electronic privacy law to clearly cover useful digital services. Updating electronic privacy law is necessary both to protect the users of these services and for the businesses who hope to encourage Americans that the... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Is Facebook Having Another Privacy Disconnect?

Apr 21, 2010

The very first sentence on Facebook's privacy guide page states: "You should have control over what you share."

That seems fairly simple, doesn't it?

But many of Facebook's recent actions, such as its much-criticized "privacy transition," have made it harder for users to retain control over their information. Is this week more of the same?

Earlier this week, following up on its , Facebook announced its plans to create more dynamic profiles using "Connections." What exactly counts as a connection wasn't clearly defined either time, but seems to include things like friends lists, likes and interests, events, groups, and activities. (Today's announcement of the Social Graph API includes News Feed, Wall, Notes, Photos, and Videos as "connections" too, but Facebook may be overusing the word to mean different things.)

More importantly, it also isn't clear whether users will have real control over how their connections are shared. Both Facebook's Monday announcement and its have suggested that users cannot prevent applications, pages, and other third parties from accessing these connections. (They may be able to "hide" them from other Facebook users, but not from the government, advertisers, or anyone else with the ability and incentive to create apps or pages.) However, today's new documents for developers point to the Extended Permissions page that requires that applications and pages to explicitly ask the user before accessing various "connections," including interests, events, groups, and location.

If Facebook believes that you "should have control over what you share," it should resolve this by giving users real control over whether their connections can be accessed by apps and pages. Doing so still won't resolve other issues, like the "app gap" that allows your friends' applications to view your personal information without your knowledge or consent, but it would be one step in the right direction.

Otherwise, the only way you can keep control of your information is to refuse to use Facebook to share or connect at all. And that's not what we mean by control.

So don't let Facebook take away control over your personal information! Tell Facebook that you want to have control over your friends, groups, events, and interests so that you – and not Facebook, the government, or anyone else – chooses how and when they are shared!

Demand control of your personal information – Demand Your dotRights!

Chris Conley is the Technology and Civil Liberties Fellow with the ACLU of Northern California.

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ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Google Announces New Tool To Track Information Requests From Governments

Apr 20, 2010
Washington – The American Civil Liberties Union today welcomed a new tool launched by Google to track and display the number of government requests the company receives worldwide, country by country. The Government Request Transparency Tool differentiates between requests for removal of particular content and requests for private user data. According to the company, there is no way yet to distingu... Read More
ACLU of Northern CA
Blog

Google's New Transparency Tool: A Window Into Government Surveillance

Apr 20, 2010
We've known for a long time that electronic privacy law is woefully outdated. But what we haven't known is how often the government is taking advantage of this fact to engage in a shopping spree in the treasure trove of personal information being collected by companies like Google.So we're happy to see Google's just-released Government Requests tool, which is the company's attempt to shine some li... Read More