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A surveillance monitoring expert watches a bank of screens showing images from Edinburgh City Council's network of CCTV cameras in Edinburgh, Scotland in 2006, REUTERS/David Moir

UN Human Rights Council takes major step towards protecting privacy online

The council announced the creation of a Special Rapporteur on the right to privacy, marking a significant step towards ensuring mass surveillance and privacy abuses receive scrutiny at the international level.

REUTERS/Khaled Abdullah

Jordanian proposal threatens to legitimise blasphemy laws around the world

ARTICLE 19 and NGOs around the globe urge the Inter-Parliamentary Union to reject Jordan’s proposed resolution, which could potentially legitimise the use of blasphemy laws by governments everywhere.

Link to: New resource exposes voter records of UN Rights Council’s member states on human rights issues

New resource exposes voter records of UN Rights Council’s member states on human rights issues

The records of United Nations Human Rights Council members in addressing egregious rights violations in individual countries are scrutinized in the updated “VotesCount” website.

Pencils, representing free expression, are seen near candles as people gather to pay tribute to victims of the Charlie Hebdo attacks (Nantes, January 2015), REUTERS/Stephane Mahe

Meet the five poets paying a heavy price for their verses

For World Poetry Day on 21 March, PEN International is calling attention to the cases of five persecuted poets worldwide.

Human Rights Council Archive

NGOs call on Human Rights Council to establish special rapporteur on right to privacy

If established, the rapporteur will provide much-needed leadership and guidance on developing an understanding of the scope and content on the right to privacy.

Link to: The ever more dangerous profession of a cartoonist

The ever more dangerous profession of a cartoonist

Reporters Without Borders has spotlighted eight cartoonists who are being threatened or persecuted because of their work.

A woman passes by mock surveillance cameras in a shop window in Zurich, Switzerland, 17 September 2008, AP Photo/Keystone, Alessandro Della Bella

International Women’s Day: How surveillance is used to assert control

Privacy International looks at some of the ways surveillance technologies can be used to control women and how the fight for women’s equal rights and for privacy have more in common than you might think.

United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein addresses the 28th Session of the Human Rights Council at the United Nations in Geneva, 2 March 2015, REUTERS/Denis Balibouse

What is at stake for free expression at the UN Human Rights Council meeting?

Kicking off this week, the UN Human Rights Council begins its 28th Session to act on some of the most pressing human rights challenges facing the world today. ARTICLE 19 will be working on a number of key issues, such as the right to privacy and artistic freedom

Photographer Serhiy Nikolayev sits on an armchair in the village of Pesky, north-west of Donetsk. Nikolayev died on Saturday after artillery fire struck near the village of Pesky, north-west of the rebel-held city of Donetsk, REUTERS/Max Rokotansky

Four journalists killed over four days in Brazil, Ukraine, Uzbekistan and Colombia

Three of the four were violently murdered, with no clear evidence for why they were attacked or whether those responsible will be charged for their deaths.

Link to: Meet 8 women fighting for free expression

Meet 8 women fighting for free expression

To mark International Women’s Day on 8 March, we profiled eight free expression champions you may not have heard of.

The band Songhoy Blues was forced to flee northeast Mali when Islamist militants took control and banned secular music, Songhoy Blues/Facebook

Why these censors can’t stop the music

How musicians in four different countries are finding surprising ways to defeat the censors and keep the beat going.

Members of the audience react after Federal Communications Commission (FCC) voting at Net Neutrality hearing in Washington, 26 February 2015, REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Victory in the U.S. for net neutrality

A reclassification of broadband Internet gives the FCC the authority to enact (and enforce) narrow, clear rules which will help keep the Internet the open platform it is today.

An anti-government protester films with her iPad during a rally in Sanabis, west of Manama, Bahrain, 12 January 2012, REUTERS/Hamad I Mohammed

Sales of surveillance technology to Bahrain violated human rights guidelines, UK watchdog finds

British-German surveillance company Gamma has been condemned by a human rights watchdog for its failure to adhere to human rights and due diligence standards that would protect against the abusive use of its products in Bahrain.

U.S. President Barack Obama speaks during the White House Summit on Countering Violent Extremism, REUTERS/Joshua Roberts

In fight against extremism, press freedom must not be compromised

While there is little denying that extremists and militant groups must be tackled, an approach must be found that will not justify restricting the press.

Privacy International

Did GCHQ spy on you? Demand government accountability for illegal spying

Privacy International’s campaign gives everyone a chance to remedy illegal government activity and hold intelligence agencies accountable.

With a budget allocation of $10.3 billion, the NRO is the third-largest U.S. intelligence agency. Its headquarters are in Chantilly, Virginia, By Trevor Paglen (Own work) [CC0], via Wikimedia Commons

Making the invisible visible: An artist brings the surveillance state out of the shadows

What does a surveillance state look like? That is the question photographer and “experimental geographer” Trevor Paglen tries to address in his recent projects.