Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)

Articles by Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF)

Protection guide for LGBTQI+ people at in-person events

With LGBTQI+ events facing harassment and persecution globally, EFF suggests some quick and easy steps to protect yourself physically and keep your data secure at in-person events.

As India prepares for elections, government silences critics on X with Executive Order

Ahead of elections, India has issued new demands to X (Twitter) to remove accounts and posts critical of the government.

UN Cybercrime Convention must not become a tool to undermine international human rights standards

Signatories stress that the Convention should only move forward if it pursues a specific goal of combating cybercrime without endangering the human rights and fundamental freedoms of those it seeks to protect, nor undermining efforts to improve cybersecurity for an open internet.

EFF’s digital rights wish-list for 2024

EFF will continue to advocate for affordable, future-proof internet access for all, and for an end of the use of artificial intelligence and automated systems for policing and surveillance.

EFF urges Pennsylvania Supreme Court to find keyword search warrant unconstitutional

Keyword warrants that let police indiscriminately sift through search engine databases are unconstitutional dragnets that target free speech, lack particularity and probable cause, and violate the privacy of countless innocent people.

USA: To address online harms, we must consider privacy first

In this report, EFF explores a new approach to tackling online harms leaving behind strategies based on ill-conceived bills and censorship-driven solutions.

Platforms must stop unjustified takedowns of Palestinian posts

“Unjustified takedowns during crises like the war in Gaza deprive people of their right to freedom of expression and can exacerbate humanitarian suffering” – EFF

Adtech surveillance and government surveillance are often the same surveillance

Police can use these surveillance tools to see the devices of people who attended a protest, follow them home, and target them for more surveillance, harassment, and retribution.