【トークイベント】「I am フォトジャーナリスト」 若手3人、戦時下のウクライナ取材=古川 英一

10 hours 30 minutes ago
      左から森佑一さん 武馬怜子さん 小野寺翔太朗さん=3月1日、東京・新宿   「I am フォトジャーナリスト」と銘打ったトークイベントが3月1日東京・新宿で開かれた。フリーで国内外に足を運び取材・撮影を続けている若い3人が、自分たちの活動や思いを伝えようという企画だ。3人は、時期は違うものの戦時下のウクライナを訪れ、その現状を発信。現地のウクライナの人たちをテーマに今年1月に本を出した小野寺翔太朗さん。そして東日本大震災の被災地からミャンマーまで、歴史と人の記憶を..
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Welcome, Daily Show Viewers! Learn More About EFF and Privacy's Defender

23 hours 12 minutes ago
About EFF

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading nonprofit defending civil liberties in the digital world. EFF’s work to protect your rights on the internet is supported by over 30,000 members who have joined our mission by donating just this year.

For over 35 years, our lawyers, activists, and technologists have been thinking about the next big thing in tech before anyone else—whether that’s age verification, AI, or Palantir. Whatever causes you fight for, EFF protects the internet infrastructure you rely on to do so.

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To learn more about our work, follow EFF on social media and subscribe to EFF's EFFector newsletter below to learn about the ways the internet and online rights are changing and what that means for you. And join EFF to support our fight—because if you use technology, this fight is yours. 

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Privacy's Defender: My Thirty Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance, by Cindy Cohn

In Privacy’s Defender: My Thirty-Year Fight Against Digital Surveillance (MIT Press), EFF Executive Director Cindy Cohn weaves her own personal story with her role as a leading legal voice representing the rights and interests of technology users, innovators, whistleblowers, and researchers during the Crypto Wars of the 1990s, battles over NSA’s dragnet internet spying revealed in the 2000s, and the fight against FBI gag orders.

"Let's Sue the Government" T-Shirt

Sometimes our supporters call EFF a merch store with a law firm attached because our stickers, hoodies and shirts are so well known. Our "Let's Sue the Government" shirt tells people: When your rights are at risk, you don’t stay quiet.

Privacy First: A Better Way to Address Online Harms

Our lawmakers seem to be losing the forest for the trees, promoting scattered and disconnected proposals addressing whichever perceived harm is causing the loudest public anxiety in any given moment. Too often, those proposals do not carefully consider the likely unintended consequences or even whether the law will actually reduce the harms it’s supposed to target. 

The truth is many of the ills of today’s internet have a single thing in common: they are built on a system of corporate surveillance. Multiple companies, large and small, collect data about where we go, what we do, what we read, who we communicate with, and so on. They use this data in multiple ways and, if it suits their business model, may sell it to anyone who wants it—including law enforcement. Addressing this shared reality will better promote human rights and civil liberties, while simultaneously holding space for free expression, creativity, and innovation than many of the issue-specific bills we’ve seen over the past decade.

Read EFF's Privacy First: A Better Way to Address Online Harms.

EFF's History

In early 1990, the U.S. Secret Service conducted raids tracking the distribution of a document illegally copied from a telecom company’s computer; one of those targeted was an Austin, TX publisher named Steve Jackson, whose computers were seized but later returned without any charges filed. Jackson’s business had suffered, and he discovered that the government had read and deleted his customers’ emails. He sought a civil liberties organization to represent him for this violation of his rights, but no existing organization understood the technology well enough to grasp the free speech and privacy issues at hand.

But a few well-informed technologists did understand. Mitch Kapor, former president of Lotus Development Corp.; John Perry Barlow, a Wyoming cattle rancher and lyricist for the Grateful Dead; and John Gilmore, an early employee of Sun Microsystems, with help from Apple co-founder Steve Wozniak, decided to do something about it – and so the Electronic Frontier Foundation was born in July 1990. The Steve Jackson Games case turned out to be an extremely important one for the early internet: For the first time, a court held that electronic mail deserves at least as much protection as telephone calls.

EFF's original logo, in use from 1990-2018

EFF continued to take on cases that set important precedents for the treatment of rights in cyberspace. In our second big case, Bernstein v. U.S. Department of Justice, the United States government prohibited a University of California mathematics Ph.D. student from publishing online an encryption program he had created. Years earlier, the government had placed encryption on the United States Munitions List, alongside bombs and flamethrowers, as a weapon to be regulated for national security purposes; our lawsuit established that written software code is speech protected by the First Amendment, and the further ruled that the export control laws on encryption violated Bernstein's rights by prohibiting his constitutionally protected speech.  Now everyone has the right to "export" encryption software—by publishing it on the Internet—without prior permission from the U.S. government. 

Since then we’ve fought against government and corporate abuses of our Constitutional rights, on issues including warrantless wiretapping by intelligence agencies, the panopticon of street-level surveillance that seeks to track everything we do, and the corporate surveillance that turns our clicks into their commodity, as well as issues of antitrust and intellectual property, artificial intelligence, cybersecurity, and much more. We are lawyers, technologists, activists, and lobbyists who work every day for the privacy, security and dignity of all who use technology - and if you use technology, this fight is yours, too.

EFF's Greatest Hits

While many early battles over the right to communicate freely and privately stemmed from government censorship, today EFF is fighting for users on many other fronts as well.

Today, certain powerful corporations are attempting to shut down online speech, prevent new innovation from reaching consumers, and facilitating government surveillance. We challenge corporate overreach just as we challenge government abuses of power.

JOIN EFF TODAY

We also develop technologies that can help individuals protect their privacy and security online, which our technologists build and release freely to the public for anyone to use.

In addition, EFF is engaged in major legislative fights, beating back digital censorship bills disguised as intellectual property proposals, opposing attempts to force companies to spy on users, championing reform bills that rein in government surveillance, documenting police technology and where it's used, helping users protect themselves from surveillance, and much more.

Learn more about some of EFF's most impactful work— Download a PDF of our new catalog, "Now That's What I Call Digital Rights!

Jason Kelley

地方公共団体情報システムの標準化に関する法律第二条第一項に規定する標準化対象事務を定める政令に規定するデジタル庁令・総務省令で定める事務を定める命令第六条各号に規定する事務の処理に係るシステムに必要とされる機能等に関する標準化基準を定める省令(案)等に対する意見募集の結果

1 day 6 hours ago
地方公共団体情報システムの標準化に関する法律第二条第一項に規定する標準化対象事務を定める政令に規定するデジタル庁令・総務省令で定める事務を定める命令第六条各号に規定する事務の処理に係るシステムに必要とされる機能等に関する標準化基準を定める省令(案)等に対する意見募集の結果
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