Deeplinks Blog posts about International
Throughout 2016, EFF and our civil society partners have been closely following digital rights developments throughout Latin America. You can see some of the results in Unblinking Eyes, our exhaustive survey of surveillance law and practice across the Americas, as well as multiple countries’ localized versions of Who Has Your Back (Mexico, Colombia, and Brazil), our guide to how companies respond to government data requests.
It's been twenty years since John Perry Barlow declared cyberspace independent, but there continues to be a long line of not-so-weary giants aiming to expand their territory over the electronic frontier. Here is 2016's roll call of national governments and courts who either presumed that their own local law should be enforced across the global Internet, or are attempting to lock down their own citizens into a shuttered and parochial version of the world wide net:
Thailand’s National Legislative Assembly voted unanimously last week to pass an amendment to that country’s Computer Crime Act (CCA), delivering a heavy blow to digital rights in Thailand. Instead of offering citizens protection against fraud, data breaches, theft, or other true cybercrimes, the amendments only worsen the ambiguity and potential for abuse that have marred the CCA since it was first enacted in 2007.
Back in May, we wrote about a draft report by Australia's Productivity Commission on how Australia's copyright and patent laws could be reformed to foster domestic production and innovation. That report is back in the news this week, after it was released in its final form, and a consultation seeking public feedback was opened.
Red en Defensa de los Derechos Digitales (R3D)—la principal organización mexicana de derechos digitales- lanzó su segundo informe anual ¿Quién defiende tus datos?, que evalúa qué tan protegida está la privacidad de los clientes de las compañías mexicanas de telecomunicaciones
El segundo informe anual de R3D examina las políticas, disponibles públicamente, de ocho de las mayores compañías de telecomunicaciones: AT&T, Axtel, Izzi, Megacable, Movistar, Telcel, Telmex y TotalPlay.
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