Civil Liberties

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Exclusive: U.N. Human Rights Experts Meet With Facebook on “Overly Broad” Definitions of Terrorist Content

In a letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, U.N. Special Rapporteur Fionnuala Ní Aoláin says networks guidelines on removing content and users need more precision and rigor…

Security Clearance Records, FOIA, and Privacy: What Went Wrong for Abigail Spanberger

How did an unredacted copy of a security clearance application for a former CIA officer-turned Democratic candidate land in the hands of a GOP super PAC?

What Happened at the Court: The Hasbajrami Oral Argument on Section 702 of FISA and the Fourth Amendment

On August 27, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit heard argument in United States v. Hasbajrami, a case that raises several challenges to the constitutionality of…

How the First Amendment Shield for Christopher Steele Can Protect Russians Too

The First Amendment ended a lawsuit against Christopher Steele over his Dossier--and could protect some Russian election meddlers too.

Americans’ Privacy at Stake as Second Circuit Hears Hasbajrami FISA Case

When Congress reauthorized Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) in January, it ratified the warrantless collection of potentially millions of Americans’…

Brennan’s Due Process Case Against the White House

In an unprecedented move, the White House announced that President Donald Trump was revoking the security clearance of John Brennan, the CIA director in the Obama administration.…

Google’s Dragonfly: A Bellwether for Human Rights in the Digital Age

Both of us vividly recall the remarkable events of 2010, when Google took its stand against Chinese government censorship by publicly declaring it would withdraw its search engine…

Just Security Podcast: ACLU’s David Cole on Defending our Democratic Traditions

Roughly a year ago, I sat down with ACLU Legal Director and Just Security editorial board member David Cole to pick his brain about what our various independent government branches…
Arab lawmakers stand up in protest during a Knesset session in Jerusalem, Thursday, July 19, 2018. Papers are thrown in the air.

“We the Jewish People”–A deep look into Israel’s new law

In the early morning hours on July 19, Israel’s parliament, the Knesset, passed “The Basic Law: Israel as the Nation State of the Jewish People,” making it part of the Israeli…

“We Could Hold Them for 100 Years If the Conflict Lasts for 100 Years”

Last week, Justice Department lawyer Ronald Wiltsie told a federal district court in Washington, D.C. that the Trump administration is entitled to imprison detainees for 100 years…

Carpenter Ruling Brings Us Back From Brink of Orwellian Surveillance State

Orwell described a world where limitless surveillance makes us question every action, every thought. Last Friday’s decision in Carpenter v. United States brought us one step…
Apps on a phone: Google Chrome, GoogleFotos, Googel Drive, Google Maps, Google Earth, and Google Calendar.

The Broad Reach of Carpenter v. United States

By focusing on the nature of the information rather than on the telecommunications nitty-gritty used to gather the information or the structure of the database in which the information…
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