高江座り込み18周年報告集会のお知らせ
衛星放送ワーキンググループ(第14回)
政党助成法に基づく政党の届出(令和7年7月29日現在)の概要
令和7年8月6日からの低気圧と前線による大雨に伴う災害に係る普通交付税(9月定例交付分)の繰上げ交付
電気通信事業法施行令の一部を改正する政令案に対する意見募集の結果
政治資金規正法施行令等の一部を改正する政令(案)等に対する意見募集の結果
情報通信審議会 情報通信技術分科会 ITU 部会 放送業務委員会(第58回)配布資料
情報通信審議会 電気通信事業政策部会 ユニバーサルサービス政策委員会(第43回)
🫥 Spotify Face Scans Are Just the Beginning | EFFector 37.10
Catching up on your backlog of digital rights news has never been easier! EFF has a one-stop-shop to keep you up to date on the latest in the fight against censorship and surveillance—our EFFector newsletter.
This time we're covering an act of government intimidation in Florida when the state subpoenaed a venue for surveillance video after hosting an LGBTQ+ pride event, calling out data brokers in California for failing to respond to requests for personal data—even though responses are required by state law, and explaining why Canada's Bill C-2 would open the floodgates for U.S. surveillance.
Don't forget to also check out our audio companion to EFFector as well! We're interviewing staff about some of the important work that they're doing. This time, EFF Senior Speech and Privacy Activist Paige Collings covers the harms of age verification measures that are being passed across the globe. Listen now on YouTube or the Internet Archive.
EFFECTOR 37.10 - Spotify Face Scans Are Just the Beginning
Since 1990 EFF has published EFFector to help keep readers on the bleeding edge of their digital rights. We know that the intersection of technology, civil liberties, human rights, and the law can be complicated, so EFFector is a great way to stay on top of things. The newsletter is chock full of links to updates, announcements, blog posts, and other stories to help keep readers—and listeners—up to date on the movement to protect online privacy and free expression.
Thank you to the supporters around the world who make our work possible! If you're not a member yet, join EFF today to help us fight for a brighter digital future.
【JCJジャーナリスト入門講座】8月末から全7回=須貝道雄
Torture Victim’s Landmark Hacking Lawsuit Against Spyware Maker Can Proceed, Judge Rules
PORTLAND, OR – Saudi human rights activist Loujain Alhathloul’s groundbreaking lawsuit concerning spying software that enabled her imprisonment and torture can advance, a federal judge ruled in an opinion unsealed Tuesday.
U.S. District Judge Karin J. Immergut of the District of Oregon ruled that Alhathloul’s lawsuit against DarkMatter Group and three of its former executives can proceed on its claims under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act – the first time that a human rights case like this has gone so far under this law. The judge dismissed other claims made under the Alien Tort Statute.
Alhathloul is represented in the case by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the Center for Justice and Accountability, Foley Hoag, and Tonkon Torp LLP.
"This important ruling is the first to let a lawsuit filed by the victim of a foreign government’s human rights abuses, enabled by U.S. spyware used to hack the victim’s devices, proceed in our federal courts,” said EFF Civil Liberties Director David Greene. “This case is particularly important at a time when transnational human rights abuses are making daily headlines, and we are eager to proceed with proving our case.”
“Transparency in such times and circumstances is a cornerstone that enacts integrity and drives accountability as it offers the necessary information to understand our reality and act upon it. The latter presents a roadmap to a safer world,” Alhathloul said. “Today’s judge’s order has become a public court document only to reinforce those rooted concepts of transparency that will one day lead to accountability.”
Alhathloul, 36, a nominee for the 2019 and 2020 Nobel Peace Prize, has been a powerful advocate for women’s rights in Saudi Arabia for more than a decade. She was at the forefront of the public campaign advocating for women’s right to drive in Saudi Arabia and has been a vocal critic of the country’s male guardianship system.
The lawsuit alleges that defendants DarkMatter Group, Marc Baier, Ryan Adams, and Daniel Gericke were hired by the UAE to target Alhathloul and other perceived dissidents as part of the UAE’s broader cooperation with Saudi Arabia. According to the lawsuit, the defendants used U.S. cybersurveillance technology, along with their U.S. intelligence training, to install spyware on Alhathloul’s iPhone and extract data from it, including while she was in the United States and communicating with U.S. contacts. After the hack, Alhathloul was arbitrarily detained by the UAE security services and forcibly rendered to Saudi Arabia, where she was imprisoned and tortured. She is no longer in prison, but she is currently subject to an illegal travel ban and unable to leave Saudi Arabia.
The case was filed in December 2021; Judge Immergut dismissed it in March 2023 with leave to amend, and the amended complaint was filed in May 2023.
“This Court concludes that Plaintiff has shown that her claims arise out of Defendants’ forum-related contacts,” Judge Immergut wrote in her opinion. “Defendants’ forum-related contacts include (1) their alleged tortious exfiltration of data from Plaintiff’s iPhone while she was in the U.S. and (2) their acquisition, use, and enhancement of U.S.-created exploits from U.S. companies to create the Karma hacking tool used to accomplish their tortious conduct. Plaintiff’s CFAA claims arise out of these U.S. contacts.”
For the judge’s opinion: https://www.eff.org/document/alhathloul-v-darkmatter-opinion-and-order-motion-dismiss
For more about the case: https://www.eff.org/cases/alhathloul-v-darkmatter-group
Contact: DavidGreeneCivil Liberties Directordavidg@eff.orgSeven projects proving community networks connect much more than devices
EU migration budget: What's planned for 2028–2034?
"When it comes to the external funding the EU provides to third countries such as Tunisia and Libya for migration control, which henceforth will be disbursed via the Global Europe Instrument, Chris Jones with the rights NGO Statewatch at a briefing said, "it's quite hard to see how any human rights values or safeguards can really be upheld.""
Full story.
Follow our work on EU border externalisation in Outsourcing Borders: Monitoring EU externalisation policy.