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Surveillance Disclosures Show Urgent Need for Reforms to EU Aid Programmes ...
We believe the Government's position of refusing to confirm or deny the existence of the Technical Capability Notice or acknowledge Apple's appeal is untenable and violates principles of transparency ...
We have questions the AI industry must answer: Where is our data going and for what purpose? how is it protected? Can we easily control what AI Assistants have access to? Can we delete data or turn ...
Private companies, including Big Tech, are responsible for a large number of digital health tools. While there may be benefits to health, there are also potential threats to your privacy from these ...
Expanding beyond GPS ankle tags, the Home Office has since Autumn 2022 been issuing so-called non-fitted devices (NFDs) to migrants who are on immigration bail and who are subject to electronic ...
“IPIC” ("Identify and Prioritise Immigration Cases”) is an algorithm utilised by the UK Home Office that automatically identifies and recommends migrants for particular immigration decisions or ...
From the Amazon rainforests to subsaharan Africa, tech companies seek to expand their dominance by investing in connectivity infrastructure. While this has certainly brought some benefits, it also ...
Who are the workers behind the training datasets powering the biggest LLMs on the market? In this explainer, we delve into data labeling as part of the AI supply chain, the labourers behind this data ...
Our updated data and elections checklist aims to give electoral observers and civil society the necessary tools to understand and assess the role of technologies in the electoral process.
The UK government wants to expand their current regime governing extremely intrusive surveillance measures like technical capability or national security notices. The latter can force companies to ...
When people’s human rights and mental health are at stake, we’d expect the Home Office to be able to show that GPS tracking migrants 24/7 is useful, necessary and proportionate. We’re still waiting, ...
The European Commission should be assessing human rights impacts of aid projects and mitigations prior to supporting surveillance in non-EU countries. The European Ombudsman has found that the ...
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