The intersection of artificial intelligence and national defense has reached a critical flashpoint as OpenAI, the developer of the ubiquitous ChatGPT platform, faces an intensifying wave of criticism from both the public and its internal workforce. The controversy stems from the company’s recent decision to secure a high-profile contract with the United States Department of […]
Civil Liberties Organizations Urge Supreme Court to Strike Down Geofence Warrants as Unconstitutional Digital Dragnets
A coalition of the nation’s leading privacy and civil liberties advocates has formally petitioned the United States Supreme Court to intervene in the escalating use of "geofence warrants," arguing that these digital dragnets represent a fundamental violation of the Fourth Amendment. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the ACLU of […]
The Invisible Dragnet: How Federal Agencies Leverage the Real-Time Bidding Advertising Ecosystem for Warrantless Location Surveillance
Recent investigative disclosures have confirmed that United States federal law enforcement agencies, specifically Customs and Border Protection (CBP), have successfully integrated the complex infrastructure of the online advertising industry into their surveillance apparatus. This integration allows government entities to track the movements of individuals with high precision by tapping into the "bidstream" data generated every […]
Architecting Digital Autonomy Shin Yang and the Rise of Privacy First Governance for Taiwans Sexual Minorities
In an era defined by the centralized dominance of multinational social media conglomerates, a Taiwanese community architect is challenging the prevailing logic of digital interaction. Shin Yang, a queer writer with a legal background and extensive experience in product management, has emerged as a leading voice in the movement for decentralized, privacy-first platform governance. As […]
Pentagon Terminates 200 Million Dollar Contract with Anthropic Following Dispute Over AI Surveillance and Ethical Guardrails
The United States Department of Defense (DoD) has officially terminated a $200 million partnership with the artificial intelligence firm Anthropic, marking a significant fracture in the burgeoning relationship between the military establishment and safety-focused AI developers. In a directive issued in late February 2026, the Pentagon not only ended its direct contractual obligations with the […]
Digital Privacy at the Border EFF and ACLU Challenge Warrantless Device Searches in Third Circuit Court
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), alongside the national American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and its affiliates in Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey, has filed a comprehensive amicus brief in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, intensifying a decade-long legal battle to establish warrant requirements for electronic device searches at international borders. The […]
The Future of the Internet Server Test and the Legal Stakes of Digital Embedding
The United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit is currently deliberating a case that could fundamentally reshape the legal landscape of the internet, potentially turning common digital practices into sources of significant legal liability. At the heart of the dispute is the "server test," a long-standing judicial doctrine that determines who is liable […]
Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance
Cindy Cohn, the Executive Director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), is scheduled to release her highly anticipated memoir on March 10, marking a significant milestone in the history of digital civil liberties advocacy. Published by MIT Press, the book chronicles three decades of legal challenges and activism at the intersection of technology and human […]
Digital Rights Advocates Urge Major Tech Firms to Resist Lawless DHS Administrative Subpoenas for User Data
A coalition of civil liberties organizations, led by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and its regional affiliates, has launched a high-stakes campaign calling on the world’s most powerful technology companies to challenge the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS) use of administrative subpoenas. The advocates argue that these subpoenas, which are issued without the oversight […]
The Hidden Price of Free Surveillance Technology and the Erosion of Local Oversight
In cities across the United States, law enforcement agencies are increasingly adopting sophisticated surveillance tools—ranging from automated license plate readers (ALPRs) to facial recognition software—without the traditional hurdles of budgetary approval or public debate. This phenomenon is driven by a complex ecosystem of surveillance technology vendors, federal agencies, and wealthy private donors who provide "free" […]
