Release Type: Press Releases
Carta a Mark Zuckerberg: organizaciones de Latinoamérica piden más protección de datos
Organizaciones latinoamericanas exigen a Facebook y entes de protección de datos mejores protecciones.
Event: Towards universal principles for promoting equality and protecting the right to non-discrimination in machine learning: The Toronto Declaration
Access Now and Amnesty International are partnering for a zero-day event at RightsCon Toronto to develop a declaration of human rights principles for Artificial Intelligence.
Google ends “domain fronting,” a crucial way for tools to evade censors
Domain fronting services enable apps and services like Tor to circumvent some forms of repressive censorship and surveillance. We urge Google to reverse course.
Access Now calls for U.S. Congressional hearings on data privacy
We’re asking the U.S. Congress to hold hearings on overbroad collection of personal information and the urgent need for data protection legislation to protect human rights.
Privacy. Security. Free expression. We’re tackling human rights in the digital age at RightsCon.
On May 16-18, 2018, RightsCon Toronto will bring a global community of experts together for the world’s leading summit on human rights in the digital age. Get your press pass today!
Des associations tunisiennes appellent l’Instance Vérité et dignité à conserver et sauvegarder les données personnelles des citoyens tunisiens sur le territoire:
جمعيات تونسية تطالب هيئة الحقيقة والكرامة بتخزين و إبقاء المعطيات الشخصية للمواطنين التونسيين داخل تراب الجمهورية
Access Now, USC IHRC urge United Nations to take action on human rights in Cameroon
Our letter to the U.N. High Commissioner on Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, urges the United Nations to address recent human rights violations committed by the Republic of Cameroon against the country’s Anglophone population.
Governments want encryption backdoors: new report examines the legal and policy implications
Access Now released a new report that concludes that any policy mandating backdoors into encrypted products “would likely be effective for only a minimal time, would be substantially costly, and might harm security in general.”