Gearing up for November: A Letter from Executive Director Abdi Soltani

By Abdi Soltani

Hands holding filled-out ballots

When it Comes to Facial Recognition, There is No Such Thing as a Magic Number

Companies and legislators are using misleading test scores to justify the expansion of facial recognition into our communities. That flawed approach understates the threat this dangerous technology poses to civil rights.

By Marissa Gerchick

Surveillance Camera

Cops Blanketed San Francisco In Geofence Warrants. Google Was Right to Protect People's Privacy

Over the last year, the ACLU of Northern California conducted a high-level analysis of the types of places captured by law enforcement in geofence warrants across San Francisco. The study revealed a troubling violation of our right to be secure in our homes and to be free from unreasonable search without probable cause.

By Jake Snow

Screenshot of SFPD geofence

Why Every County Needs Civilian Oversight of its Local Sheriff's Department

A State law that took effect in 2021 gave counties the authority to establish civilian oversight boards to assist supervisors in overseeing sheriffs’ offices. However, the law does not require counties to create civilian boards. That’s why the ACLU of Northern California is helping to educate community members about the fact that this law exists. And we are supporting individual counties that wish to create them.

By Allyssa Victory

Sheriff's vehicle

Progress in the Fight Against Face Surveillance

Illustrated image of a white police officer using face surveillance on a Black family. It

Berkeley Fails to Learn Surveillance Lessons Within 'Oppenheimer'

In Christopher Nolan’s ‘Oppenheimer,’ there is a scene where government agents creep outside a gathering of UC Berkeley-affiliated activists to write down the license plates of those parked outside the event. Instead of learning from this history, the City of Berkeley has taken a step towards repeating it.

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The Fight Against Surveillance in San Francisco

For decades, the ACLU of Northern California has fought back against discriminatory and dangerous state surveillance in San Francisco. Read a chronicle of our movement.

By Brady Hirsch

Police surveillance

Lessons from San Francisco’s Killer Robot Debate

How could San Francisco, a purported “progressive” city, authorize deadly police robots? And how do we stop this policy, or something similar, from returning?

By Jennifer Tu, John Lindsay-Poland

Black and red graphic with a robot carrying a bomb outside of San Francisco's painted ladies

San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors Grants Police More Surveillance Powers

By a margin of 4-7, the San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors voted to give the SFPD access to privately owned cameras. With the cameras, comes the power to put essentially the entire city under live surveillance indefinitely.

By Matthew Guariglia - Electronic Frontier Foundation

SFPD Surveillance Graphic, Two Surveillance Cameras on Red Background, Spying on BLM Activists