about Department of Commerce: Address Privacy Before Licensing Satellites to Watch Over Us As Surveillance Litigation Director, Jennifer Lynch leads EFF's legal work challenging government abuse of search and seizure technologies through the courts by filing lawsuits and amicus briefs in state and federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, on important …

We Have Questions. LEARN MORE ABOUT US, AND HOW YOU CAN HELP.Should the police be able to force Google to turn over identifying information on every phone within a certain geographic area—potentially hundreds or thousands of devices—just because a crime occurred there? As we argued in an This week, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion in Should the fact that your neighbors can see the outside of your house mean the police can use a camera to record everything that happens there for more than five months? about Department of Commerce: Address Privacy Before Licensing Satellites to Watch Over Us That’s why we joined ACLU, ACLU of Massachusetts, and the Center for Democracy &...This week, GEDmatch, a genetic genealogy company that gained notoriety for giving law enforcement access to its customers’ DNA data, quietly lawsuits and amicus briefs in state and federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, on important issues at the intersection of technology and privacy. Jennifer Lynch is the Surveillance Litigation Director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a United States-based non-profit organization dedicated to protecting privacy, civil liberties, and innovation in new technologies. We don’t think so either. Jennifer leads EFF's legal work challenging government abuse of search and seizure technologies through the courts. She is also an artist, activist, and community organizer. We Have Questions. about EFF Files Amicus Brief Arguing Geofence Warrants Violate the Fourth Amendment about Courts Issue Rulings in Two Cases Challenging Law Enforcement Searches of License Plate Databases about EFF Testifies Today on Law Enforcement Use of Face Recognition Before Presidential Commission on Law Enforcement and the Administration of Justice about EFF, ACLU & CDT Argue Five Months of Warrantless Covert 24/7 Video Surveillance Violates Fourth Amendment about Police May Not Need a Warrant to Rummage Through Your Trash, But Warrantless Collection of DNA Is Unconstitutional about Clearview AI—Yet Another Example of Why We Need A Ban on Law Enforcement Use of Face Recognition Now about Courts Grapple with a Sea Change in Fourth Amendment Law After Carpenter v US: Year in Review 2019 about Genetic Genealogy Company GEDmatch Acquired by Company With Ties to FBI & Law Enforcement—Why You Should Be Worried about Facebook Is Changing Its Face Recognition Settings. As Surveillance Litigation Director, Jennifer Lynch leads EFF's legal work challenging government abuse of search and seizure technologies through the courts by filing lawsuits and amicus briefs in state and federal courts, including the U.S. Supreme Court, on important … We don’t think so either. Panel Description: Beyond devices, our bodies are also becoming data sources. Before arriving to EFF, she was the founder of t4tech, a trans forward tech collective based in NYC. As Surveillance Litigation Director, Jennifer Lynch leads EFF's legal work challenging government abuse of search and seizure technologies through the courts by filingEFF TURNS 30 THIS YEAR! As we argued in an This week, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals issued an opinion in Should the fact that your neighbors can see the outside of your house mean the police can use a camera to record everything that happens there for more than five months? As Surveillance Litigation Director, Jennifer Lynch leads EFF's legal work challenging government abuse of search and seizure technologies through the courts by filingEFF TURNS 30 THIS YEAR!