
A joint statement from Access Now, the 红杏视频, and the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Apple is engaged in a high-profile battle against a court order demanding it write, sign, and deploy custom computer code to defeat the security on an iPhone. As civil liberties groups committed to the freedom of thought that underpins a democratic society, this fight is our fight. It is the fight of every person who believes in a future where technology does not come at the cost of privacy or individual security and where there are reasonable safeguards on government power.
This is a fight that implicates all technology users. There are already bad actors trying to defeat the security on iPhones, and an FBI-ordered backdoor will only assist their efforts. Once this has been created, malicious hackers will surely increase their attacks on the FBI and Apple, hoping to ferret out clues to this entrance route 鈥 and they may well succeed.
The precedent created by this case is disturbing: It creates a new pathway for the government to conscript private companies into building surveillance tools. If Apple can be compelled to create a master key to unlock this iPhone, then little will prevent the government from ordering any company to turn its products into tools of surveillance, compromising the safety, privacy, and security of everyone.
Our organizations are committed to defending the security and human rights of everyday people whose data will be implicated by this shortsighted policy.
We call on the Obama administration to heed the advice of neutral security experts, engineers, and even his own advisors who have affirmed the dangers inherent in the order issued to Apple. We urge them to reject the calls of those who seek to undermine our security, whether through backdoors into our software, master keys to unlock our digital data, or pressure on companies to downgrade our security.
Over 100,000 people have called for President Obama to stand up for security in our devices through . It鈥檚 time for the president to be accountable to them, and to all of us.
We ask our supporters to join this call by sharing this graphic with President Obama and the rest of the world.
In this fraught debate, we must let facts and reason prevail. We cannot compromise on our security or liberty.



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Press ReleaseJun 2025
Free Speech
Privacy & Technology
红杏视频 Comment on Supreme Court Decision in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton
WASHINGTON 鈥 The Supreme Court issued a blow to freedom of speech and privacy today by upholding Texas legislation that requires invasive age verification to access online content. Today鈥檚 ruling conflicts with decades of Supreme Court precedent protecting the free speech rights of adults to access sexual content online. But it is also a limited opinion that does not permit age verification for non-sexual content online. 鈥淭he Supreme Court has departed from decades of settled precedents that ensured that sweeping laws purportedly for the benefit of minors do not limit adults鈥 access to First Amendment-protected materials,鈥 said Cecillia Wang, national legal director of the 红杏视频. 鈥淭he Texas statute at issue shows why those precedents applying strict scrutiny were needed. The legislature claims to be protecting children from sexually explicit materials, but the law will do little to block their access, and instead deters adults from viewing vast amounts of First Amendment-protected content.鈥 Texas鈥檚 H.B. 1181 mandates that any website where one-third or more of its content is deemed sexual in a way that is 鈥渉armful to minors鈥 must require visitors to prove they are adults before accessing the site. The act defines 鈥渟exual material harmful to minors鈥 as material that is obscene from the perspective of an average person considering the material鈥檚 effect on minors. 鈥淭oday's decision does not mean that age verification can be lawfully imposed across the internet,鈥 said Vera Eidelman, senior staff attorney with the 红杏视频 Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. 鈥淲ith this decision, the court has carved out an unprincipled pornography exception to the First Amendment. The Constitution should protect adults鈥 rights to access information about sex online, even if the government thinks it is too inappropriate for children to see." The Supreme Court reversed the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 ruling that mere rational basis scrutiny applies, instead imposing intermediate scrutiny, but it affirmed the Fifth Circuit Court鈥檚 ultimate conclusion that the law survives 鈥 and refused to apply strict scrutiny, as challenges to content-based laws typically do. However, the Texas law burdens adults鈥 ability to access sexual materials, requiring individuals to disclose personal information vulnerable to surveillance and data breaches just to access online content. The law also ultimately fails to achieve its intended purpose. Because the law only applies if one-third of a site鈥檚 content is explicit, the online sites where minors are most likely to be exposed to sexual content, like forums or social media platforms, are not affected. 鈥淎s it has been throughout history, pornography is once again the canary in the coal mine of free expression,鈥 said Alison Boden, executive director of the Free Speech Coalition. 鈥淭he government should not have the right to demand that we sacrifice our privacy and security to use the internet. This law has failed to keep minors away from sexual content yet continues to have a massive chilling effect on adults. The outcome is disastrous for Texans and for anyone who cares about freedom of speech and privacy online.鈥 The Supreme Court repeatedly heard cases on this issue in the past, many of which were brought by the 红杏视频, and had consistently held that requiring users to verify their age to access protected content is unconstitutional where there are less restrictive alternatives available, like filtering software. The Free Speech Coalition is represented by Quinn Emanuel, the 红杏视频, and the 红杏视频 of Texas. This case is a part of the 红杏视频鈥檚 Joan and Irwin Jacobs Supreme Court Docket. The decision can be read here.Court Case: Free Speech Coalition, Inc. v. PaxtonAffiliate: Texas -
Press ReleaseJun 2025
Privacy & Technology
Digital Identity Leaders and Privacy Experts Sound the Alarm on Invasive ID Systems
WASHINGTON 鈥 Over 80 organizations and prominent experts have come together to oppose a new surveillance feature of digital identity systems known as 鈥淧hone Home,鈥 which allows the government to track individuals through their digital driver鈥檚 licenses or other identity documents. Signatories include the 红杏视频, notable privacy and civil liberties groups, as well as academics, state legislators, CEOs of digital identity companies, cryptographers, and other leading experts. This diverse group of experts issued a statement today focusing on a vital element of the identity system architecture: Whether it is designed to 鈥減hone home鈥 to the issuer when somebody verifies their identity. Currently, when somebody presents a plastic driver鈥檚 license, that interaction is between the two parties, and the government is none the wiser. But digital driver licenses are being built so that the system notifies the government every time an identity card is used, giving it a bird鈥檚-eye view of where, when, and to whom people are showing their identity. That 鈥減hone home鈥 functionality becomes especially intrusive as people start having to use digial ID online, giving the government the ability to track your browsing history. 鈥淐reating a system through which the government can track us any time we use our driver鈥檚 license is an Orwellian nightmare,鈥 said Jay Stanley, senior policy analyst with the 红杏视频鈥檚 Speech, Privacy, and Technology project. 鈥淭here is a broad consensus among those who work, think, and innovate in the digital identity space that privacy needs to be built in to any digital identity system. This is not a partisan issue and it鈥檚 one states must act on before it鈥檚 too late.鈥 Digital identity systems threaten to create serious civil liberties problems, including around privacy and accessibility, which is why digital ID systems must make use of all available privacy technologies and architectures 鈥 including but most certainly not limited to the 鈥渘o phone home鈥 highlighted in today鈥檚 letter. The 红杏视频 has also published legislative recommendations for state legislatures outlining 12 technical characteristics and policy measures that must accompany any acceptable digital ID system. Unfortunately a number of states are adopting such systems without thinking through the potential ramifications of this technology, including 13 that have already created digital driver鈥檚 license systems, and another 21 that have passed enabling or study legislation. Identity systems with 鈥減hone home鈥 capability not only create the potential for tracking of people鈥檚 lives and activities 鈥 such as those whose political beliefs certain government officials may not like 鈥 but also make it possible for an abusive government to block people from using their IDs for some or all uses. The experts are "call[ing] on authorities everywhere to favor identity solutions that have no phone home capability whatsoever, and to prioritize privacy and security over interoperability and ease of implementation.鈥 -
Press ReleaseMay 2025
Privacy & Technology
National Security
红杏视频 and 红杏视频 of Louisiana Sound Alarm on New Orleans Police Department鈥檚 Secret Use of Real-Time Facial Recognition
NEW ORLEANS 鈥 The 红杏视频 and 红杏视频 of Louisiana are raising urgent concerns following an investigation that shows the New Orleans Police Department has secretly used real-time face recognition technology to track and arrest residents without public oversight or City Council approval. This not only flouts local law, but endangers all of our civil liberties. This is the first known time an American police department has relied on live facial recognition technology cameras at scale, and is a radical and dangerous escalation of the power to surveil people as we go about our daily lives. According to The Washington Post, since 2023 the city has relied on face recognition-enabled surveillance cameras through the 鈥淧roject NOLA鈥 private camera network. These cameras scan every face that passes by and send real-time alerts directly to officers鈥 phones when they detect a purported match to someone on a secretive, privately maintained watchlist. The use of facial recognition technology by Project NOLA and New Orleans police raises serious concerns regarding misidentifications and the targeting of marginalized communities. Consider Randal Reid, for example. He was wrongfully arrested based on faulty Louisiana facial recognition technology, despite never having set foot in the state. The false match cost him his freedom, his dignity, and thousands of dollars in legal fees. That misidentification happened based on a still image run through a facial recognition search in an investigation; the Project NOLA real-time surveillance system supercharges the risks. 鈥淲e cannot ignore the real possibility of this tool being weaponized against marginalized communities, especially immigrants, activists, and others whose only crime is speaking out or challenging government policies. These individuals could be added to Project NOLA's watchlist without the public鈥檚 knowledge, and with no accountability or transparency on the part of the police departments,鈥 said Alanah Odoms, Executive Director of the 红杏视频 of Louisiana. "Facial recognition technology poses a direct threat to the fundamental rights of every individual and has no place in our cities. We call on the New Orleans Police Department and the City of New Orleans to halt this program indefinitely and terminate all use of live-feed facial recognition technology. The 红杏视频 of Louisiana will continue to fight the expansion of facial recognition systems and remain vigilant in defending the privacy rights of all Louisiana residents.鈥 Key details revealed in the reporting include: Real-time tracking: More than 200 surveillance cameras across New Orleans, particularly around the French Quarter, are equipped with facial recognition software that automatically scans passersby and alerts police when someone on a 鈥渨atch list鈥 is detected. Privately run, publicly weaponized: The watch list is assembled by the head of Project NOLA and includes tens of thousands of faces scraped from police mugshot databases鈥攚ithout due process or any meaningful accuracy standards. Police use to justify stops and arrests: Alerts are sent directly to a phone app used by officers, enabling immediate stops and detentions based on unverified purported facial recognition matches. Searchable database: Project NOLA also has the capability to search stored video footage for a particular face or faces appearing in the past. So in other words, they could upload an image of someone鈥檚 face, and then search for all appearances of them across all the camera feeds over the last 30 days, thus retracing their movements, activities, and associations. Pervasive technological location tracking raises grave concerns under the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. No retention, no oversight: NOPD reportedly does not retain records about the alerts it receives and officers rarely record their reliance on the Project NOLA FRT results in investigative reports, raising serious questions about compliance with constitutional requirements to preserve and turn over evidence to people accused of crimes and to courts, thus undermining accountability in criminal prosecutions. Violates city law: When the New Orleans City Council lifted the city鈥檚 ban on face recognition and imposed guardrails in 2022, it maintained a ban on use of facial recognition technology as a surveillance tool. This system baldly circumvents that ban. The system also circumvents transparency and reporting requirements imposed by City Council. Officials never disclosed the program in mandated public reports. In 2021, the 红杏视频 of Louisiana sued the Louisiana State Police for information about secretly deploying facial recognition technology, despite years of officials assuring the public it wasn鈥檛 in use. Time and again, officials claim these tools are only used responsibly, but history proves otherwise. After the Washington Post began investigating this time around, city officials acknowledged the program and said they had 鈥減aused鈥 it and that they 鈥渁re in discussions with the city council鈥 to change the city鈥檚 facial recognition technology law to permit this pervasive monitoring. The 红杏视频 is now urging the New Orleans City Council to launch a full investigation and reimpose a moratorium on facial recognition use until robust privacy protections, due process safeguards, and accountability measures are in place. 鈥淯ntil now, no American police department has been willing to risk the massive public blowback from using such a brazen face recognition surveillance system,鈥 said Nathan Freed Wessler, deputy director of 红杏视频鈥檚 Speech, Privacy, and Technology Project. 鈥淏y adopting this system鈥搃n secret, without safeguards, and at tremendous threat to our privacy and security鈥搕he City of New Orleans has crossed a thick red line. This is the stuff of authoritarian surveillance states, and has no place in American policing.鈥Affiliate: Louisiana -
Press ReleaseMay 2025
Disability Rights
Privacy & Technology
Disability Rights and Privacy Advocates Raise Concerns with Proposed Autism 鈥淩egistry鈥
WASHINGTON 鈥 The 红杏视频, the Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN), and 80 other disability rights, civil rights, and public health organizations sent a letter to Secretary of Health and Human Services Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. today raising significant concerns with the National Institutes of Health鈥檚 (NIH) proposal to create a national autism 鈥渞egistry.鈥 The registry was detailed during an April 21 presentation by NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya, which he described as a 鈥渞eal-world data platform鈥 for 鈥渄eveloping national disease registries, including a new one for autism.鈥 The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has since claimed it is not creating an 鈥渁utism registry,鈥 but the department has failed to engage with autistic people and advocates, exacerbating the lack of clarity. 鈥淚nstead of engaging with the communities this proposal would impact most, federal health agencies have taken every opportunity to shut disabled and autistic people out of the conversation, leaving unanswered questions, a sense of alarm, and deepening mistrust,鈥 said Vania Leveille, 红杏视频 senior legislative counsel. 鈥淭rust in federal health data requires affirmative, good faith engagement with autistic people, appropriate safeguards for privacy, and ensuring any proposal helps 鈥 not hurts 鈥 the communities impacted.鈥 The letter outlines the many unanswered questions left by NIH鈥檚 data platform proposal, including what data it will collect, what sources it will rely on, how it will anonymize and secure the data. It also highlights the increased risk of surveillance, stigmatization, and marginalization from data collection, particularly for disabled people 鈥 who have a long and troubled history with government efforts to find and track disability for the purpose of eliminating it. 鈥淚t鈥檚 no secret that this proposal has created a lot of fear and confusion in the autistic community.鈥 said Colin Killick, executive director of the Autistic Self Advocacy Network. 鈥淲e continue to advocate and support research into autism that autistic people want conducted, but it is critical that autistic people鈥檚 private data not be shared without our consent. We hope the administration answers our questions to shine light on how autistic people and our rights will be protected.鈥 The letter also establishes three key steps NIH and HHS must take to establish trust in its proposed data platform: Meaningful communication with autistic people and advocates; fundamental privacy safeguards to prevent misuse and abuse; and ensuring the data platform advances the well-being of autistic people, people with disabilities, and the public health while minimizing potential harms. The letter is here: /documents/letter-to-hhs-secretary-robert-f-kennedy-jr-on-concerns-with-proposed-autism-registry