Why It’s More Important Than Ever to Protect Privacy and Free Speech: The ACLU Business Guide

Tech Companies are under a microscope and the stakes couldn’t be higher – for democracy, for consumers, and for their bottom line. This guide gives businesses expert advice on how to navigate this landscape.

By Jacob Snow

Privacy & Free Speech - It's Good for Business

Amazon Met With ICE Officials to Market Its Facial Recognition Product

It was recently discovered that Amazon is marketing its face surveillance product "Rekgonition" to Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

By Neema Singh Guliani

Photo: Immigration and Customs Enforcement / flickr

Police Are Acquiring Surveillance Tech in Secret. A California Bill Would Give the Public a Say.

A groundbreaking bill pending in California would bring this day-to-day local surveillance out of the shadows and give communities a way to fight back against surveillance systems that are disproportionately aimed at immigrants and people of color.

By Chloe Triplett

Amazon rekognition video still

Amazon’s Face Recognition Falsely Matched 28 Members of Congress With Mugshots

In a test the ACLU recently conducted of Amazon's facial recognition tool, called “Rekognition,” the software incorrectly matched 28 members of Congress, identifying them as other people who have been arrested for a crime. The false matches were disproportionately of people of color.

By Jacob Snow

Members of Congress Falsely Matched by Amazon Rekognition

Electric Scooters Are Racing to Collect Your Data

Scooter companies Spin, Bird, and Lime are racing to gather your personal data, and have failed to take the time and steps necessary to properly address rider privacy.

By Nomi Conway

Scooter Photo

Over 150,000 People Tell Amazon: Stop Selling Facial Recognition Tech to Police

On Monday afternoon, civil rights, religious, and community organizations are taking their demand that Amazon stop providing face surveillance technology to governments, including police departments, to the company’s headquarters in Seattle. The groups will deliver over 150,000 petition signatures, a coalition letter signed by nearly 70 organizations representing communities nationwide, and a letter from Amazon shareholders.

By Kade Crockford

Four people walk down a pathway outside a building while Amazon tracks their faces

We're Demanding the Government Come Clean on Surveillance of Social Media

By Hugh Handeyside

stock photo of a person using a computer keyboard

Amazon Teams Up With Law Enforcement to Deploy Dangerous New Face Recognition Technology

By Nicole A. Ozer

Three surveillance cameras on a wall point in three different directions giving the sense of a panopticon

A New Bill Restores California’s Power to Fight Secret Surveillance

In neighborhoods across California, law enforcement agencies are deploying secret and invasive surveillance technologies to collect sensitive location and biometric data, target local activists, and feed ICE’s deportation machine.

City traffic