![]() EFFector Volume 37, Issue 18🪪 Age Verification Is Coming for the InternetWelcome to an all-new EFFector, your regular digest on everything digital rights from the Electronic Frontier Foundation. In our 835th issue: How to spot sneaky ALPR cameras at the U.S. border, a host of new resources on age verification laws, and why AI companies need to protect chatbot logs from bulk surveillance. |
|---|
When you lose your rights online, you lose them in real life. Become an EFF member today! |
|---|
Featured Story: Age Verification Is Coming for the Internet. We Built You a Resource Hub to Fight Back. Age verification laws are rapidly proliferating around the world, creating a dangerous and confusing tangle of rules about what we’re all allowed to see and do online. In the U.S., more than half of all states have now passed laws imposing age-verification requirements on online platforms. And just last week, an Australian law barring access to social media for anyone under 16 went into effect. Though these mandates claim to protect children, in practice they create harmful censorship and surveillance regimes that put everyone—adults and young people alike—at risk.
EFF Updates👹 BAD PATENTS: EFF recently submitted comments to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) to oppose proposed rules that would sharply restrict the public’s ability to challenge bad patents. More than 4,000 supporters have now added their voices—an extraordinary response. This massive wave of public comments sends the USPTO a clear message: don’t shut the public out of patent review. |
|---|
Don’t Let Tyrants Co-opt TechTechnology is supercharging the attack on democracy by making it easier to spy on people, block free speech, and control what we do. The Electronic Frontier Foundation’s activists, lawyers, and technologists are fighting back. |
|---|
"The thing that we learned as we were growing up, how to stay safe online, is not to give people your real name, your age, your birthdate, where you live. These are like classic no-nos on the internet."EFF's Molly Buckley in this week's EFFector audio companion on how age verification laws force us to betray the most basic rules of online safety. Hear our discussion with Molly here.
MiniLinks🗣️ Free Speech
🔒 Privacy
💡 Creativity and Innovation 🗝️ Security
AnnouncementsEFF Events
EFF Opportunities Corporate Giving and Sponsorships
Questions About Surveillance at Work?Screen monitoring. Mouse tracking. Call recording. Body scans. Ever wonder: Is my boss really allowed to do that? Submit your questions to a new "Car Talk"-inspired show from former top consumer protection enforcers. The show from former FTC commissioner Alvaro Bedoya and former Iowa AAG Max Miller will answer people’s questions about your rights in our messed up economy—starting with workplace surveillance joined by special guest Jennifer Abruzzo, former NLRB general counsel. |
|---|
Fresh EFF Gear Is HereShow off your support for EFF with hot digital rights merch from our online store. Just in: An Art Nouveau-inspired black scoop neck with shimmering gold circuits, celebrating the beauty of technology and the fight for digital freedom. In addition to EFF shirts and hoodies, we have a wide variety of freedom-supporting swag in stock, including (extremely popular) liquid core gaming dice, HTTP playing cards, and a tactile Lady Justice braille sticker. |
|---|
AdministriviaEFFector is a publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. Editor: [email protected] Membership and donation queries: [email protected] General EFF, legal, policy, or online resources queries: [email protected]
Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged. MiniLinks do not necessarily represent the views of EFF.
About EFFThe Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading nonprofit defending online civil liberties. We promote digital innovation, defend free speech, fight illegal surveillance, and protect rights and freedoms for all as our use of technology grows. Find out more at https://www.eff.org/.
This message is printed from 100% recycled electrons. EFF appreciates your support and respects your privacy.
|
|---|


