Four Actions You Can Take To Protect Digital Rights this International Women’s Day

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This International Women’s Day, defend free speech, fight surveillance, and support innovation by calling on our elected politicians and private companies to uphold our most fundamental rights—both online and offline.

1. Pass the “My Body, My Data” Act

Privacy fears should never stand in the way of healthcare. That’s why this common-sense federal bill, sponsored by U.S. Rep. Sara Jacobs, will require businesses and non-governmental organizations to act responsibly with personal information concerning reproductive health care. Specifically, it restricts them from collecting, using, retaining, or disclosing reproductive health information that isn’t essential to providing the service someone asks them for. The protected information includes data related to pregnancy, menstruation, surgery, termination of pregnancy, contraception, basal body temperature or diagnoses. The bill would protect people who, for example, use fertility or period-tracking apps or are seeking information about reproductive health services. It also lets people take on companies that violate their privacy with a strong private right of action.

2. Ban Government Use of Face Recognition

Study after study shows that facial recognition algorithms are not always reliable, and that error rates This article has been indexed from Deeplinks

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