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Published in: HomeThe largest personal data leakage in Brazilian history
Why the rest of the world should be worried, and think hard about how to create a data protection culture.
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Published in: digitaLibertiesLand rights, bushfires and indigenous rights online
"I believe indigenous peoples can teach us a lot about the power of resilience, alongside lessons on how to save...
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Published in: HomeFixing digital democracy? The future of data-driven political campaigning
Do we know enough to regulate the private vendors central to every stage of an election campaign? We need to if we...
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Published in: digitaLibertiesMental health and artificial intelligence: losing your voice
While we still can, let us ask, "Will AI exacerbate discrimination?" as the productive forces of mental health are...
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Published in: Home“Same story, different soil”: the Deathscapes Project gets under way
Hawk Newsome: “It’s the same story, different soil... from Long Bay to the USA. In Sydney, his name is David Dungay....
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Published in: digitaLibertiesDo you agree?: What #MeToo can teach us about digital consent
The conversation around sexual consent could radically change the way we think of consent online.
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Published in: HomeThe right to be forgotten risks becoming a tool to curb free press
Online news archives highlight the tension between the right to know and the right to be forgotten.
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Published in: HomeDreadful symmetry: kill boxes, racism and US sovereign power in the digital age
Nearly all of the killings and excuses for killings carry this mark of the “pre-insurgent”. All the time we hear,...
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Published in: HomeSnowden to Cambridge Analytica – making the case for the social value of privacy
Constitutionally inculcated rights and morality are slowly being undone “by the use of automated processes to assess...
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Published in: HomeThe scramble for data and the need for network self-determination
The scramble for data is unleashing a new form of colonialism: turning a quintessentially open internet into a...
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Published in: HomeDigital giants are trading away our right to privacy
Today, the big tech race is for data extractivism from those yet to be 'connected' in the world – tech companies...
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Published in: HomeNet neutrality at a crossroads: why India’s policy process has important lessons for the US
Digital equality demands that access to the internet is seen as indivisible from a democratic internet. Net...
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Published in: HomeScrapping FCC net neutrality rules would be a mistake
Repealing net neutrality would result in the de facto concentration of internet control of revenue from accessible...
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Published in: HomeThe UK government spied on human rights groups – now they’re taking it to court
After human rights groups challenged the government for its mass surveillance infrastructure, they were themselves...
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Published in: HomeThe end of anonymity? Trump and the tyranny of the majority
Worldwide, there is an administration-sanctioned attack on anonymity, online and off.
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Published in: HomeInternet access, sustainability, and citizen participation: electricity as a prerequisite for democracy?
Democracy is not innate but learned, and access to information is the critical link between education and democracy....
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Published in: TransformationDo we still need human judges in the age of Artificial Intelligence?
Technology and the law are converging, but what does that mean for justice?
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Published in: digitaLibertiesThe digital revolution in Havana: between liberation and submission
How might Cubans make actual the words of revolution, so that they recall not only past glory, but one that could...
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Published in: HomeSilencing dissent: digital capitalism, the military junta and Thailand’s permanent state of exception
In the last three years of military rule in Thailand, prosecutions for defamation, sedition and computer crimes...
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Published in: HomeDefending human rights in a digital age (III): activism behind the screen
What have human rights got to do with the technical running of the internet?