The Spy In Your Pocket

What do your cell phone and the current trial of twenty-six Americans, many of them CIA agents, in an Italian court for the 2003 kidnapping of Muslim cleric Abu Omar have to do with each other?

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

Is Your Picture Worth a Thousand Ads?

We have written numerous posts discussing how companies want to know who you are, what you do, and where you go online because this information can translate into big advertising revenue. Your photos may be the new frontier.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

Cable Company Trades Customers' Privacy for Profit

Charter Communications, one of the nation's largest cable Internet providers, plans to begin monitoring the online activities of its high- speed Internet customers and then sell the data for targeted advertising.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

Group Letter Urging Google to Give Privacy Its Rightful Place on the Homepage

A coalition of privacy and consumer organizations from California to Washington, D.C. have sent a letter today urging Google to post a prominent link on its homepage to its privacy policy in accordance with the California Online Privacy Protection Act (OPPA) and the widespread practice of commercial web sites.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

Free Speech on Twitter

By Nicole A. Ozer

default statue of liberty torch

The Privacy of Your Laptop at International Borders

The blogosphere has been bubbling over the past few weeks over the subject of laptop searches and seizures at international borders. The source of the buzz? A couple of recent court cases.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

MySpace Case May Threaten Online Speech

A federal grand jury on Thursday issued an indictment against a Missouri woman accused of creating a fake MySpace page to bully a 13-year old girl who later committed suicide. The high profile, and emotionally charged case, has drawn media attention from around the world.

By Nicole A. Ozer

Placeholder image

California Declares Marriage Equality for All

Today is the day we’ve been working for—a watershed for basic fairness and human dignity. The California Supreme Court has recognized that equality means that everyone must be free to marry the person they love.Profound social change starts in California, and

By Maya Harris

Placeholder image

Fresno Homeless Case: Synopses of Plaintiffs Declarations

When the ACLU of Northern California learned in October of 2006 that the City of Fresno was violating the constitutional rights of its homeless residents by seizing and immediately destroying their possessions, we, along with the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights and the law firm of HellerEhrman LLP, filed a class-action lawsuit in federal district court.

By ACLU of Northern California

Placeholder image