Shutting Down Cell Service During Protests: The Constitutional Dimension

BART has a serious public relations problem. BART Police have been involved in three fatal shootings of passengers in the past three years, including the Oscar Grant incident in 2009, in which an unarmed African-American New Year's Eve reveler was shot in the back while lying face-down on a BART platform by a white police officer who later testified that he meant to use his taser, not his pistol. The shooting, and the controversial verdict in the criminal trial of the BART police officer, spurred widespread protests.

By Gabe Rottman

BART platform

Faced with Opposition from Wireless Industry, CA Legislators Make the Wrong Call

The good news is that SB 1434, the important California privacy law that would make sure that police get a warrant before getting access to sensitive location information, passing its first hurdle and is moving onto a full vote by the California Senate.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Wireless Industry Admits: "Working Day and Night" to Hand Over Your Location Info to Police

Wireless companies are opposing an important new mobile privacy bill in California (SB 1434) because they say they are too busy "working day and night to assist law enforcement," so it would be too much of a burden to tell their customers how often and why they are turning over location data to law enforcement.

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Location Information: Time for a Privacy Check-In

Location data from your cell phone or portable device can make it easy to get directions or locate the closest coffee shop. But that location data also says a lot about you – where you go, what you do, and who you know. And outdated privacy laws, written before GPS and other location-aware technologies even existed, mean that all this personal information isn't being properly protected from prying eyes. Don't pay for location-based services by giving up control of your personal information. Demand a privacy upgrade. Demand your dotRights!Wherever you go, companies may followYo

By ACLU of Northern California

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Proposed Amendments to #CISPA Don't Protect Privacy

Yesterday, the House Intelligence Committee released proposed changes to the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, also known as CISPA that, according to its sponsors, represent "huge progress" towards addressing the privacy and internet freedom community's concerns.

By ACLU of Northern California

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Revising CA's Drug Penalty: Time to Treat the Problem

When we stop spending millions of dollars a year to incarcerate Californians whose only crime is addiction, we will free up funding that can be used to help more people get the treatment they need.

By Margaret Dooley-Sammuli

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ACLU-NC and Bay Guardian File New FOIA to Uncover Local U.S. Attorney Demands for Location Info

The ACLU of Northern California (ACLU-NC) and San Francisco Bay Guardian (Bay Guardian) have filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to try to uncover how United States Attorneys in the Northern District of California are seeking and accessing sensitive location data. (Read the FOIA request here)

By Nicole A. Ozer

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Kicking off "Stop Cyber Spying Week"

The ACLU, along with several other groups, is launching a weeklong campaign called "Stop Cyber Spying Week" to draw attention to the massive civil liberties problems in H.R. 3523, the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act of 2011, better known as CISPA. CISPA is scheduled to be voted on by the House of Representatives next week.

By Mandy Simon

Internet data

California Pushes Back on the War on Women

Across the country we're seeing ongoing attacks on access to reproductive health care. Massive attacks. The Guttmacher Institute released data today detailing that, just a few months into 2012, hundreds of provisions to restrict abortion access have been introduced in state legislatures around the country. Several have already been enacted. Now, more than ever, it's vitally important that California move in the opposite direction and continue its role as a national leader in ensuring that women have access to reproductive health care.

By Maggie Crosby

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