Search Taxonomy Terms

Our data is not for trade

Trade, and the people who negotiate trade agreements, fundamentally misunderstand data, privacy and data protection.

Protecting Privacy In The Digitalisation Of Reproductive Healthcare

We work with others to ensure protection of and stop the exploitation of patient data because accessing reproductive healthcare should not require giving up your human rights, including privacy.
 

No Body’s Business But Mine

People all over the world share with menstruation apps their deeply intimate data - the date of their last periods, dates and details pertaining to their sex lives, their moods, their health. This data is being ruthlessly exploited and shared with third parties to target and profile people. 

When Big Brother Pays Your Benefits

Rising concerns around austerity, transparency, efficiency and financial management have fed into a narrative of technology as a magic cure-all to socio-economic and political issues.

Security should protect people, not exploit them

We want a world which is safer for everyone, and at the heart of this is technologies which are secure by default.

 

When Social Media makes you a target

Governments are profiling people using their social media data -- effectively weaponising the devices and the platforms we use everyday.

Scrutinising the global counter-terrorism agenda

Increasingly counter-terrorism strategies and policies are decided at the international level, most notably by the UN Security Council, and are used to erode human rights, with no accountability.

Exposing new frontiers of identity

The ways in which we're called to identify ourselves is changing, and leaving us open to exploitation.

Demanding identity systems on our terms

There is a growing push towards identity systems around the world - leading to some of the world's largest biometric databases, as well as other technologies that can be used to track and profile individuals and communities.

 

IoT in Court

Exploiting new technologies that are in our homes and on our bodies as part of criminal investigations and for use as evidence, raises new challenges and risks that have not been sufficiently explored.