The SEC Is Starting a Massive Database of Every Stock Trade
Brokers will have to report every trade and the trader’s personal information.
Brokers will have to report every trade and the trader’s personal information.
The government is refining its ability to track your movements with little discussion.
The longest-serving California senator was a hardline drug warrior, a surveillance hawk, and no friend of freedom.
Government agencies have paid to access huge amounts of Americans' data.
The age verification proposal is a disaster for both children and adults.
Virginia’s children’s privacy proposal leaves businesses wondering how they can comply.
Thousands of local, state, and federal law-enforcers have access to sensitive financial data.
Eliminating privacy in schools would be a disaster for academic freedom and social development.
Part of a law that authorizes warrantless snooping is about to expire, opening up a opportunity to better protect our privacy rights.
The court ruled that the state's six-week abortion ban violates the right to privacy.
Intelligence-gathering “fusion centers” repeatedly abuse civil liberties without making us safer.
Plus: Still no House speaker, the gender gap in college scholarships, Meta fined $414 million, and more...
Zion’s attempts to push out unwanted renters collides with Fourth Amendment protections.
The release of the former president’s tax returns sets a dangerous precedent.
A surveillance state is no less tyrannical when the snoops really believe it's for your own protection.
No judge should have to fear for their lives as they defend the rule of law. But that doesn’t mean they can infringe on other civil liberties to protect their information.
A law to protect people engaged in journalism from having to reveal sources gets blocked by Sen. Tom Cotton.
Kelly Conlon's bizarre experience gives a glimpse into a future with omnipresent facial recognition systems.
Senator Warren wants to extend the financial surveillance state cooked up by drug warriors and anti-terrorism fearmongers to cryptocurrencies.
Photos and information you store on iCloud will be safer from hackers, spies, and the government.
A precedent set in the January 6 prosecutions could be dangerous to the public.
How a Prohibition-era legal precedent allows warrantless surveillance on private property.
At a dangerous moment for the free exchange of ideas, civil libertarians can tally a win.
Congress should not forget that they can legislate in response to Supreme Court rulings.
Too many Western governments want to follow in the footsteps of authoritarians when it comes to tech privacy.
This surveillance would be unconstitutional—and there’s no reason to believe it will make anyone safer.
The Atlas of Surveillance lets us monitor the agencies that snoop on the public.
The bill would amp up surveillance while doing little to actually protect anyone.
Rethinking the constitutional defense of reproductive rights after Dobbs via the Ninth Amendment
Voters will soon cast ballots on a constitutional amendment that seeks to explicitly remove any protections for abortion in the state's constitution.
Fearmongering about mass school shootings leads to some dumb, privacy-threatening ideas.
Any new rules for the crypto market should protect entrepreneurs and investors from overzealous intervention, not subject them to it.
While the California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act was hailed as a victory for digital privacy, critics warn of a litany of unintended consequences.
Judge Gary Klausner admits that the FBI probably hid their true motives in rifling through the contents of hundreds of safe deposit boxes, but says that's fine.
"[A] prisoner's right to be free from highly invasive intrusions on bodily privacy by prison employees of the opposite sex—whether on religious or privacy grounds—does not change based on a guard's transgender status."
A new ordinance passed by the city's Board of Supervisors allows police to request live access to private security cameras even for misdemeanor violations.
An Ohio judge ruled on Monday that Cleveland State University's use of "room scans," a popular method for preventing cheating during online exams, violates the Fourth Amendment.
New court documents show that the FBI planned for months to seize and forfeit property found inside safe deposit boxes in an L.A. raid under the pretext of doing an inventory.
For the first time ever, the Treasury Department has sanctioned not a person or a group but a digital tool and all who would use it.
Senior Producer Zach Weissmueller explores how the crackdown on cryptocurrency tools has implications for free speech and financial privacy.
A mother-daughter arrest in Nebraska was fueled in part by unencrypted Facebook messages police accessed through a warrant.
"The 2021 Request seeks information that may inform the United States House of Representatives Committee on Ways and Means as to the efficacy of the Presidential Audit Program, and therefore, was made in furtherance of a subject upon which legislation could be had."