Skip to main content
Back to content

Tag: Regulations

|Image: surveillance cameras on the street.

Commission urged not to backtrack on EU spyware rules

9 Jun 2020
News
Commission urged not to backtrack on EU spyware rules
9 Jun 2020
Commission urged not to backtrack on EU spyware rules
|Vietnam: Immediately release Pham Doan Trang

Government may have ordered internet shutdown in Congo-Brazzaville

20 Oct 2015

Today, several news outlets reported an internet shutdown in Congo-Brazzaville, where thousands of people are protesting after news surfaced that President Sassou Nguesso is contemplating a proposal to extend presidential term limits. While it’s not clear yet what’s happening in Congo-Brazzaville, we’re very concerned about the safety and security of the people protesting. Internet shutdowns do not restore order, help victims, or protect rights.

Post
Government may have ordered internet shutdown in Congo-Brazzaville
20 Oct 2015
Government may have ordered internet shutdown in Congo-Brazzaville

France has trust issues and it could cost you your privacy

8 Oct 2015

Last week the French National Assembly — the lower chamber of the French Parliament — adopted a Surveillance Bill that would enable mass surveillance of international phone calls and allow the government tap French undersea cables to vacuum up all internet traffic.

Post
France has trust issues and it could cost you your privacy
8 Oct 2015
France has trust issues and it could cost you your privacy

Two years from Tahrir, no progress on telcos and rights

25 Jan 2013

Two years ago, amidst the protests in Tahrir Square, telcos in Egypt shut down their networks, cutting of citizens from the global internet. Since then, the telecom industry has made promises to develop rights-respecting guidelines and principles, but has failed to deliver.

Post
Two years from Tahrir, no progress on telcos and rights
25 Jan 2013
Two years from Tahrir, no progress on telcos and rights