Category «Civil Liberties»

Who Has Your Face

EFF – Who Has Your Face – “Law enforcement and government agencies have access to over 641 million photos for facial recognition purposes—photos of more than half of Americans. Knowing which agencies can access these images is necessary to fight back against this invasion of privacy. Learn more below. Table of Contents State Licenses/IDs Passports, …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, E-Government, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy

De-Google your life: How to delete all photos from Google Photos

Proton Blog: “Using Google Photos to store and share your pictures means allowing the company to see, analyze, and process them. Many people concerned about their privacy have taken steps to move away from the Google ecosystem, despite the company’s efforts to hide its surveillance-based business model. Apart from privacy concerns, Google made promises about …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy, Search Engines, Social Media

In November 2024, everything is at stake

“The cornerstone of democracy rests on the foundation of an educated electorate. That’s a quote from Thomas Jefferson, and it’s super-relevant to our situation today. Our schools aren’t doing enough to create an educated electorate, and most of our journalists are doing a terrible job. This is terrifying, because the 2024 elections could be the …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Congress, Courts, Free Speech, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Health Care, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Privacy, Social Media

Utah outlaws books by Judy Blume and Sarah J Maas in first statewide ban

The Guardian: “Books by Margaret Atwood, Judy Blume, Rupi Kaur and Sarah J Maas are among 13 titles that the state of Utah has ordered to be removed from all public school classrooms and libraries. This marks the first time a state has outlawed a list of books statewide, according to PEN America’s Jonathan Friedman, …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Education, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Legislation, Libraries

We need to prepare for ‘addictive intelligence’

MIT Technology Review [unpaywalled] The allure of AI companions is hard to resist. Here’s how innovation in regulation can help protect people. “AI concerns overemphasize harms arising from subversion rather than seduction. Worries about AI often imagine doomsday scenarios where systems escape human control or even understanding. Short of those nightmares, there are nearer-term harms …

Subjects: AI, Civil Liberties, Economy, Financial System, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

The Man Behind Project 2025’s Most Radical Plans

ProPublica:  The Man Behind Project 2025’s Most Radical Plans  – As Donald Trump tried to disavow the politically toxic project, its director, Paul Dans, stepped down. But the plans and massive staffing database that he prepared — to replace thousands of members of the “deep state” with MAGA loyalists — remain…But then again, his resignation …

Subjects: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Free Speech, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Knowledge Management, Legal Research

CrowdStrike, Antitrust, and the Digital Monoculture

EFF: “Last month’s unprecedented global IT failure should be a wakeup call. Decades of antitrust inaction have made many industries dangerously reliant on the same tools, making such crises inevitable. We must demand regulators break up the digital monocultures that are creating a less competitive, less safe, and less free digital world. The Federal Trade …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Internet, Legal Research, Marketing, Microsoft, Privacy

NIST releases a tool for testing AI model risk

TechCrunch: “The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the U.S. Commerce Department agency that develops and tests tech for the U.S. government, companies and the broader public, has re-released a testbed designed to measure how malicious attacks — particularly attacks that “poison” AI model training data — might degrade the performance of an AI …

Subjects: AI, Civil Liberties, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, E-Government, Government Documents, Internet, Legal Research, Privacy

Human rights scores

Data is Plural: “The CIRIGHTS project aims “to create numerical measures for every internationally recognized human right for all countries of the world.” The team has developed a detailed guide to scoring each government’s record on dozens of such rights, such as freedom of religion, women’s political rights, freedom from extrajudicial killings, the right to …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Courts, E-Government, Government Documents, Legal Research

2024 State Scorecard on Women’s Health and Reproductive Care

The Commonwealth Fund: Our Scorecard ranks every state’s health care system based on how well it provides high-quality, accessible, and equitable health care. Read the report to see health care rankings by state. Scorecard Highlights: Massachusetts, Vermont, and Rhode Island top the rankings for the 2024 State Scorecard on Women’s Health and Reproductive Care, which …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Courts, Economy, Education, Government Documents, Health Care, Legal Research, Medicine

How data brokers sell our location data and jeopardise national security

Netzpolitic.org: “The AdTech industry is torpedoing the privacy of millions of people in Germany and is a threat to national security. But the underlying problem is global: databrokers sell location data without sufficient control. This is the summary of a joint research by netzpolitik.org and BR. Our investigation with BR (Bayerischer Rundfunk) shows for the …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Defense, E-Commerce, Internet, Legal Research, Privacy

UN Cybercrime Draft Convention Dangerously Expands State Surveillance Powers

EFF –This is the third post in a series highlighting flaws in the proposed UN Cybercrime Convention. Check out Part I, our detailed analysis on the criminalization of security research activities, and Part II, an analysis of the human rights safeguards. “As we near the final negotiating session for the proposed UN Cybercrime Treaty, countries …

Subjects: Civil Liberties, Cybercrime, Cybersecurity, Digital Rights, Government Documents, Legal Research, Privacy