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.
At Home and Abroad ISPs Turn Over User Information
Nov 09, 2007
Yahoo! executives faced harsh criticism this week from the House Foreign Affairs Committee for the company's role in the Chinese government's arrest of journalist and democracy advocate Shi Tao.After Shi Tao posted warnings to journalists about possible social unrest leading up to the anniversary of the Tiananmen Massacre, Yahoo supplied the government with the information needed to identify and a...
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Bit By Bit Comcast Chips Away At Net Neutrality
Oct 19, 2007
Today's news story that Comcast is blocking customer use of peer-to-peer program, BitTorrent, provides yet another glimpse into a future without net neutrality.
According to several sources, Comcast disrupts communications between users of the peer to peer file sharing protocol. Comcast's block can be analogized to dropping a telephone call between two people and has been called "the ...
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Net Neutrality Supports a Free and Open Internet
Oct 17, 2007
On September 27, we blogged about Verizon’s attempt to discriminate based on content when it announced that it would block the text messages of NARAL. After a firestorm of bad press, Verizon quickly retreated and said that it had all been a misreading of their policy. But, whether or not companies will be able to function as a bottleneck on protected speech is at the heart of the debate over net n...
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Federal Judge Strikes Down Two Patriot Act Wiretap Provisions
Oct 16, 2007
In late September, US District Judge Ann Aiken ruled that the PATRIOT Act's changes to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) violated the Fourth Amendment's prohibition against unreasonable searches and seizures.
The sections of FISA struck down by Judge Aiken detail how and under what circumstances federal officials can get a warrant to wiretap. Prior to the passage of the...
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California RFID Bill Signed Into Law Today By Governor
Oct 12, 2007
State Senator Joe Simitian (D-Palo Alto) announced today that Governor Schwarzenegger signed his Senate Bill 362, which would prohibit employers and others from forcing anyone to have a radio frequency identification (RFID) device implanted under their skin. The bill will go into effect on January 1, 2008.RFID "tags" are tiny chips with miniature antennae that can be embedded in almost anything. U...
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Department of Homeland Security Tracks Airline Passengers’ Personal Info, Reading Material
Oct 11, 2007
Last November we learned that the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) has been secretly compiling data on millions of innocent Americans. According to the Washington Post, the DHS has been using its Automated Targeting System (ATS) originally developed for cargo security to generate "terrorist" risk ratings on American travelers. This past August the DHS proposed a rule that would continue the c...
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What's the 411 on Google's New Service?
Oct 11, 2007
Over the last week, Americans in places as far as upstate New York and as nearby as downtown San Francisco have noticed ads on billboards and taxi cabs for Google's new service, Google 411.
Google 411allows users to call a 1-800 number to get local business information for no fee. Users can also connect to the requested number without a charge and can have the phone number sent as a t...
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Fight for Online Free Speech Continues — Again
Oct 09, 2007
In case you missed it on our National ACLU blog, here is an entry written by the ACLU's Catherine Crump about the government's latest attempt to censor the Internet.
As expected, the government is appealing the ACLU's March 2007 victory in the Child Online Protection Act (COPA) case. COPA is an Internet censorship law that makes it a crime to place content deemed "harmful to minors" o...
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Congress Halts Spy Satellite Use
Oct 03, 2007
A controversial new program to use spy satellites for domestic surveillance has been postponed due to concerns brought to the attention of Congress by the ACLU and other civil liberties groups.
On September 6, Barry Steinhardt, the Director of the ACLU's Technology and Liberty Program, testified before Congress, asking for a moratorium on the domestic use of military spy satellites un...
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Parsing McConnell's FISA Comments
Oct 03, 2007
In case you missed it on the National ACLU blog, check out this post by Michael German, Policy Counsel on national security, immigration and privacy. He explains how some of the Director of National Intelligence's public statements in support of warrantless wiretaps distort reality, the issues, and the law.
There's been a lot of confusion of late about just how vital the Protect Ameri...
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Who Loves Real ID? The Companies Do.
Sep 28, 2007
In case you missed it on the National ACLU blog, check out this post by Noam Biale from the National Technology and Liberty Program. It discusses how companies that stand to profit significantly from a massive national ID and database system are trying to use their pull to convince Congress to fund this privacy and security nightmare.
The federal Real ID Act doesn't have many friends ...
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Fair Use Drives Free Speech and the Economy
Sep 27, 2007
According to a recent study by the Computer & Communications Industry Association (CIAA) , the fair use doctrine in copyright law not only facilitates criticism, news reporting, teaching, scholarship and research, but fair use-related industries add $2.2 trillion dollars to the United States economy each year in the process.
While some corporations see fair use as a thorn in the side,...
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