Image: The growing Internet citizenry is using sarcasm, wit and Twitter to draw attention to a controversial cybersecurity bill
As Controversial Cybersecurity Legislation Moves Through House, Activists Make a Quiet Start
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Wednesday, April 18 2012
After Internet businesses and activists forced the halt of the Stop Online Piracy Act, it seemed as if a new political force had come alive to advocate on Capitol Hill for an Internet with hard limits on government surveillance and a structure that favored free access to information over centralized control. But faced with new cybersecurity legislation that civil liberties groups say would contribute to exactly the opposite, the headline-grabbing protests that defeated SOPA are nowhere to be seen. So what's happening? Read More
Activists Plan Protests Against House Internet Surveillance Bill "CISPA"
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Wednesday, April 11 2012
Many of the same organizations that planned the Internet-wide protests that killed the Stop Online Piracy Act are gearing up to launch another high profile demonstration against a controversial piece of cybersecurity legislation that is speeding towards the House floor.
Read MoreEditorial: How @Google And Friends Can Build Local Internet Power
BY Micah L. Sifry | Monday, March 26 2012
Just over two months ago, somewhere around 10 million people emailed, called, faxed and otherwise cajoled their Members of Congress to express their opposition to the Stop Online Privacy (SOPA) and Protect IP (PIPA) Acts. An approximated 115,000 websites either went "dark" or joined the campaign in related ways, with Google, Wikipedia, Firefox, Wordpress, and Tumblr all playing leading roles. In two days, legislation that had been moving through Congress like a dose of salts was withdrawn from consideration, with dozens of Members suddenly announcing their opposition, including many who had originally supported the bills. The Internet had won, at least this once. Micah Sifry asks, now what? He writes: "We urgently need a conversation about one other huge piece of the puzzle: What's going to happen with all those email addresses Google and the other anti-SOPA groups collected from people who responded to their call to action on January 18th?" Read More
Geeks Gear Up To Fight Online IP Bills, PIPA, SOPA
BY Sarah Lai Stirland | Wednesday, January 11 2012
Activists advocating an open Internet and worried that the Senate could fast-track a controversial online intellectual property protection bill are coalescing on the web and getting together to set up meetings with their ... Read More
EFF and Access Team Up for 'Secure the Internet' Push
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, April 25 2011
The Electronic and the digital advocacy group Access have teamed up to launch the HTTPS Now campaign: HTTPS (Hypertext Transfer Protocol Secure) protects web surfing by encrypting requests from a user's browser and the ... Read More
Twitter's Transparency as Emulation Worthy Tech Practice
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, January 11 2011
Wired.com's Ryan Singel suggests that Twitter's reaction to a U.S. district court order for Wikileaks's participants user records should become the industry standard: Twitter introduced a new feature last month without ... Read More
The Legal Nuances of Facebook Ghostwriting
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, September 13 2010
The Electronic Frontier Foundation's Marcia Hoffman makes the case that if Sarah Palin really does have someone else penning her provocative Facebook posts, she's a violator of Facebook's terms of service and quite ... Read More
FTC vs Bloggers: Cruising for a Bruising?
BY Micah L. Sifry | Wednesday, October 14 2009
The last time I saw political bloggers across the spectrum agreeing about anything, it was in opposition to some overly restrictive notions emanating from the Federal Elections Commission about regulating political ... Read More
EFF, CDT Propose Nuanced Alternative to Government Cookie Ban
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, May 12 2009
In a report released today, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and the Center for Democracy and Technology are advancing the idea that the federal government's near-blanket ban on persistent cookies -- imposed by OMB ... Read More
Can Uncle Sam Balance Privacy and Engagement?
BY Nancy Scola | Monday, May 11 2009
The set-up for tomorrow's "Privacy and Analytics on Government Web Sites" event in Washington DC promises a refreshing blend of techno-utopianism and cyber conspiracy thinking. The Center for Democracy and ... Read More