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.
International Agreement on Net Neutrality
Apr 15, 2008
Last week, a coalition of consumer and public-interest groups in the U.S. and Europe presented a resolution to U.S. government representatives that called for policies to promote net neutrality on the Internet.The Trans Atlantic Consumer Dialogue [TACD] has some 65 members, including the ACLU, Public Knowledge, the European Public Health Alliance and the European Consumers Organization.In order to...
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Speak Up for the Future of the Internet
Apr 10, 2008
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is holding a hearing on internet freedom and net neutrality in Palo Alto next Thursday, April 17. With the future of the internet at stake, it is absolutely critical that those who support freedom of expression show up in force.Your comments in person will send a strong message to Washington that Americans will not tolerate private corporate Internet gat...
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Library Censorship - Same Old Issue, New Medium
Mar 07, 2008
San Jose and Sacramento are currently debating whether to censor access to internet information at their libraries. The internet has become a pivotal means of accessing information at the library and with its growth in importance, the age-old issues of library censorship have followed.To Kill a Mockingbird, The Color Purple, and Heather Has Two Mommies are just a small selection of material that s...
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Government Appeals Patriot Act Ruling in the Ninth Circuit
Mar 03, 2008
In September 2007, a U.S. District Court judge in Oregon struck down two provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act as unconstitutional. Brandon Mayfield, a Portland-based attorney, was arrested and detained in connection with the 2004 bombing of a train station in Madrid, but was released after two weeks when a fingerprint at the scene alleged to be his was matched to an Algerian terrorist. The court foun...
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Free Speech Triumphs in Wikileaks Case
Feb 29, 2008
Today was a really good day for the First Amendment. And it was also a good day for our court system. The judge made it clear in the Wikileaks case that he took the Constitutional issues seriously, at one point reminding the court that he had taken an oath to uphold the Constitution.From the very beginning of the argument over what should happen in the Wikileaks case, the judge made it clear that ...
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Free Speech Triumphs in Wikileaks Case
Feb 29, 2008
Today was a really good day for the First Amendment. And it was also a good day for our court system.From the very beginning of the argument over what should happen in the Wikileaks case, the judge made it clear that he took the Constitutional issues seriously, at one point reminding the lawyers for the Bank that he had taken an oath to uphold the Constitution.In the end the Court not only dissolv...
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ACLU And EFF File To Intervene In Internet Free Speech Lawsuit
Feb 29, 2008
The American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Northern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) last night filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit that led a federal district judge to order the domain name Wikileaks.org shut down. The motion is on behalf of organizations and individuals that have accessed and used documents on the Wikileaks.org website in their work and want to c...
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ACLU And EFF File To Intervene In Internet Free Speech Lawsuit
Feb 27, 2008
Order To Shut Down Wikileaks.org Violates First Amendment, Groups SayThe American Civil Liberties Union, the ACLU of Northern California and the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) last night filed a motion to intervene in a lawsuit that led a federal district judge to order the domain name Wikileaks.org shut down. The motion is on behalf of organizations and individuals that have accessed and us...
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Social Networking and Privacy: NOT An Oxymoron
Feb 17, 2008
A recent policy conference on Internet issues held in Washington, D.C. included the panel, "Social Networking and Privacy: An Oxymoron?" It shouldn't be, but some of the major platforms for social networking seem to be treating the two concepts as if they were mutually exclusive.We have blogged about the controversy over Facebook's Beacon feature, a program launched during the holiday shopping sea...
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New Stanford Technology Law Review Article on RFID and Identification Documents
Feb 08, 2008
The ACLU of Northern California has been a leader in generating public and legislative attention to the privacy, personal safety, and financial security risks associated with the use of Radio Frequency Identification (RFID) technology in government-issued identification documents, such as drivers' licenses and student ID cards.The Stanford Technology Law Review has recently published Rights "Chipp...
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ACLU Scorecard on Final REAL ID Regulations
Feb 05, 2008
The ACLU has released a systematic analysis of the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) final regulations for the Real ID Act. It reveals that the regulations still address only 9 percent of the problems with the act that have been identified.The final regulations do not lift the burdens that Real ID imposes on the states and the population, a close look at the regulations reveals that the Real...
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Want to Talk to TSA? They're Listening
Feb 05, 2008
The Transportation Security Agency has come under significant and ongoing criticism. One major source of concern and irritation are the No-Fly lists, which contain tens of thousands of names and has generated a lot of negative press when U.S. senators, famous musicians and others have been kept off of flights. There are even those who say that TSA is largely engaged in "security theater," meant pr...
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