All Quiet on the Middle Eastern Front: Silencing the Speech of Military Troops

Earlier this week, the U.S. military ordered troops to stop posting to blogs and sending personal emails without getting clearance. More information here. And the regulations here.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Some Tech Trying to Protect Privacy

We are now living in a world where the technology exists to keep track of everything we do and say and everywhere we go. Video surveillance, RFID chips that allow stored data to be read at a distance, and massive databases of who we call and what Internet sites we browse mean more information about our lives is being preserved, and being preserved for longer periods of time.

Advances in digital storage capacity, and computers now capable of efficiently indexing and searching vast amounts of archived digital data, seem to be leading our society toward a digital version of Jeremy Bentham's panopticon , a world in which citizens limit their speech and actions for fear of how endlessly retained surveillance or personal data might someday be used against them.

But some academics and scientists are turning technology on its head, developing technical solutions that help to enhance users' privacy.

For example, Professor Viktor Mayer-Schönberger of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government argues in a recent working paper that personal digital information should have a reasonable, predetermined shelf life, enforced by the same technologies that collect and store it.

In a similar vein, Belgian and German researchers have proposed a system to help individuals manage the photographs taken of them with cell phone cameras, integrated into the very camera-phones that take and transmit the pictures.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Monday SF Supervisor Hearing on Muni WiFi

Late breaking news that the Board of Supervisor's Budget Committee will hold a public hearing on Monday afternoon about the Earthlink/Google contract.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Governor Shrinking From Real ID?

While other states are courageously standing up to Congress' misguided national ID mandate, California's Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger is giving his constituents a different, or shall we say, indifferent message.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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California Court of Appeal Declares West Sacramento Gang Injunction Void

In 2007, the California Court of Appeal declared that the permanent injunction imposed on a so-called gang in West Sacramento is void. The injunction could not stand because the County District Attorney failed to give adequate notice to those who would be affected by it.

By ACLU of Northern California

police car

Innocence Project Marks Its 200th Exoneration

Jerry Miller, a former Army cook, spent nearly 25 years in prison for a crime he did not commit. In 1981, at the age of 22, Miller was tried and convicted for the brutal rape of woman in downtown Chicago. His conviction was based on what is now understood to be mistaken eyewitness identification.

By ACLU of Northern California

Jerry Miller

U.S. Supreme Court Decision Undermines Roe v. Wade

The U.S. Supreme Court decision  issued on April 18, 2007 upholding a federal law banning certain abortions will endanger women's health and is a set back for all Americans who believe politicians should not legislate medical decision-making.  The decision disregards the opinion of leading doctors and medical organizations that oppose the ban because it is harmful to women's health.

By ACLU of Northern California

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Taking a Swipe at Our Privacy

If these documents are embedded with RFID tags, the government could use the technology to read all of our drivers'licenses from a distance, without our knowledge, as we walk down the street or attend a political protest or gun show- surreptitiously keeping track of who we are, where we go, and what we do.

The government's possible justification for tracking and monitoring all of us through National IDs? They might catch a few wrongdoers in the process.

Using RFI

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Journalist/Blogger Josh Wolf Out of Jail

ACLU of Northern California wrote an amicus brief on Josh Wolf's behalf in both the District Court and Ninth Circuit, contesting the government's argument that a journalist cannot invoke a First Amendment privilege when presented with a grand jury subpoena.

Click here for more information and to read the court documents.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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