California's Social Media Ban: Big Tech Gets a Pass, Users Get Scrutiny
Everyone wants a cleaner internet. But California's latest move? It's less about safety and more about control. The EFF isn't buying it.
Everyone wants a cleaner internet. But California's latest move? It's less about safety and more about control. The EFF isn't buying it.
The battle against online trackers is bigger than just annoying ads. EFF's Privacy Badger is now a front line in the fight against government surveillance fueled by commercial data harvesting.
Fifty-five thousand device searches. Last fiscal year. That's the kind of chilling number the EFF is shouting about, and frankly, it should make you stop scrolling. We're talking about your phone, your digital life, being X-rayed without a warrant at the border. This isn't science fiction; it's happening.
Guy Kawasaki, a name that still echoes in Silicon Valley circles, has re-released his guide to Signal. It's free, it's in EPUB, and it's about privacy. Go figure.
Government surveillance is a runaway train. The EFF wants you to help pull the emergency brake. It’s about privacy, stupid.
The EU's Digital Services Act and AI Act are just the beginning. Now, the Digital Fairness Act is on the table, and the EFF is sounding the alarm: are we building a rights-respecting internet or one controlled by corporations?
As the EU eyes new digital regulations, the Electronic Frontier Foundation is pushing back against surveillance-heavy approaches. Their roadmap for the Digital Fairness Act demands a radical shift towards user sovereignty and privacy.
The EU's Digital Fairness Act promised to rein in online harms. Instead, the EFF says, it's flirting with more surveillance. Here's why that's a problem.
The digital battleground for truth is heating up, and the frontline is now Gaza. EFF's stark submission to the UN paints a grim picture of escalating press freedom violations.
Forget bots and algorithms for a second. The real frontier of AI and online control might just be your bank account. Former EFF Director Rainey Reitman's new book, *Transaction Denied*, pulls back the curtain on financial intermediaries quietly becoming gatekeepers of expression.
San Francisco's digital rights fortress just got a new general. Nicole Ozer, architect of California's toughest surveillance laws, steps up to lead EFF as tech giants ramp up AI tracking.
Demand letter lands. Panic sets in. But May First Movement Technology didn't fold. They shredded Higbee's shakedown with cold, hard law.