
Blog
We can be pretty sure that each new day will bring two things: new threats to our civil liberties, and new stories of people standing up for their rights and winning. Behind every court ruling is a person. Behind every landmark law is a movement. Read the stories and hear the voices that ground our work.
Ask the Experts! Free Speech in Schools
May 21, 2012
Social media and other emerging technologies are fundamentally altering how students interact and express themselves in school. Staff Attorney Linda Lye explains the history of student free speech, and discusses technology's modern twist on the First Amendment.
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DEA Recording Americans’ Movements on Highways, Creating Central Repository of Plate Data
May 18, 2012
The DEA wants to capture the license plates of all vehicles traveling along Interstate 15 in Utah, and store that data for two years at their facility in Northern Virginia. And, as a DEA official told Utah legislators at a hearing this week (attended by ACLU of Utah staff and covered in local media), these scanners are already in place on “drug trafficking corridors” in California and Te...
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Facebook: $100 Billion IPO. Almost 1 Billion Users. You Do the Math.
May 16, 2012
The big news in the business world this week is Facebook's ongoing Initial Public Offering, where the company is selling shares to the public based on an estimated value of around one hundred billion dollars. [Or, as Dr. Evil would say: one hundred billion dollars.]Where does that kind of valuation come from?Certainly, some of it comes from Facebook's infrastructure and employees. But most of that...
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Twitter Stands Up for One of its Users
May 08, 2012
By Aden FineACLU National OfficeTwitter has filed a motion in state court in New York seeking to quash a court order requiring it to turn over information about one of its users and his communications on Twitter. This particular case involves a Twitter user, Malcolm Harris, who is being prosecuted by the District Attorney's Office in Manhattan for disorderly conduct in connection with the Occupy W...
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Shutting Down Cell Service During Protests: The Constitutional Dimension
May 01, 2012
BART has a serious public relations problem. BART Police have been involved in three fatal shootings of passengers in the past three years, including the Oscar Grant incident in 2009, in which an unarmed African-American New Year's Eve reveler was shot in the back while lying face-down on a BART platform by a white police officer who later testified that he meant to use his taser, not his pistol. ...
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Faced with Opposition from Wireless Industry, CA Legislators Make the Wrong Call
Apr 25, 2012
The good news is that SB 1434, the important California privacy law that would make sure that police get a warrant before getting access to sensitive location information, passing its first hurdle and is moving onto a full vote by the California Senate.The bad news is that several California legislators made the wrong call yesterday, selling out the privacy interests of Californians to the wireles...
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Wireless Industry Admits: "Working Day and Night" to Hand Over Your Location Info to Police
Apr 23, 2012
Wireless companies are opposing an important new mobile privacy bill in California (SB 1434) because they say they are too busy "working day and night to assist law enforcement," so it would be too much of a burden to tell their customers how often and why they are turning over location data to law enforcement.Every moment of every day, our mobile devices track our location, and our cell providers...
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Location Information: Time for a Privacy Check-In
Apr 23, 2012
Information about where you go is valuableLocation data from your cell phone or portable device can make it easy to get directions or locate the closest coffee shop. But that location data also says a lot about you – where you go, what you do, and who you know. And outdated privacy laws, written before GPS and other location-aware technologies even existed, mean that all this personal information ...
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Proposed Amendments to #CISPA Don't Protect Privacy
Apr 19, 2012
Yesterday, the House Intelligence Committee released proposed changes to the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, also known as CISPA that, according to its sponsors, represent "huge progress" towards addressing the privacy and internet freedom community's concerns.But, many privacy advocates, including the ACLU, and groups including the Center for Democracy and Technology, Free ...
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Revising CA's Drug Penalty: Time to Treat the Problem
Apr 18, 2012
When we stop spending millions of dollars a year to incarcerate Californians whose only crime is addiction, we will free up funding that can be used to help more people get the treatment they need.This is the logic behind Senate Bill 1506 (D-Leno), which passed its first hurdle yesterday when it won a majority of votes in the Senate Public Safety Committee. SB 1506 proposes to revise the state's p...
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ACLU-NC and Bay Guardian File New FOIA to Uncover Local U.S. Attorney Demands for Location Info
Apr 17, 2012
The ACLU of Northern California (ACLU-NC) and San Francisco Bay Guardian (Bay Guardian) have filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to try to uncover how United States Attorneys in the Northern District of California are seeking and accessing sensitive location data. (Read the FOIA request here)Location data from your cell phone or portable device can make it easy to get directions or l...
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Kicking off "Stop Cyber Spying Week"
Apr 16, 2012
The ACLU, along with several other groups, is launching a weeklong campaign called "Stop Cyber Spying Week" to draw attention to the massive civil liberties problems in H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, better known as CISPA. CISPA is scheduled to be voted on by the House of Representatives next week.
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