Bio
Kade Crockford is the Director of the Technology for Liberty Program at the ACLU of Massachusetts and MIT Media Lab Director's Fellow. Kade works to protect and expand core First and Fourth Amendment rights and civil liberties in the digital 21st century, focusing on how systems of surveillance and control impact not just the society in general but their primary targets—people of color, Muslims, immigrants, and dissidents.
The Information Age produces conditions facilitating mass communication and democratization, as well as dystopian monitoring and centralized control. The Technology for Liberty Program aims to use our unprecedented access to information and communication to protect and enrich open society and individual rights by implementing basic reforms to ensure our new tools do not create inescapable digital cages limiting what we see, hear, think, and do. Towards that end, Kade researches, strategizes, writes, lobbies, and educates the public on issues ranging from the wars on drugs and terror to warrantless electronic surveillance. Kade has written for The Nation, The Guardian, The Boston Globe, WBUR, and many other publications, and regularly appears in local, regional, and national media as an expert on issues related to technology, policing, and surveillance.
Find Kade's blog, Privacy Matters, at privacysos.org/blog, the ACLU of Massachusetts' dedicated privacy and technology website.
Featured work
Aug 22, 2012
License Location Data Sharing Marches Forward
Jul 30, 2012
What We Know About License Plate Tracking, What We Don't, And Our Plan to Find Out More
May 15, 2012
In Massachusetts, A Registry of Everywhere You’ve Ever Driven?
Feb 9, 2012
The Government Says You Are Better Off Passing Out Flyers in a Ski Mask Than Tweeting Controversial Material
Dec 29, 2011
WTF? (What the Fawkes?)