Consumer Online Privacy
The ACLU works in courts, legislatures, and communities to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties that the Constitution and the laws of the United States guarantee everyone in this country.
The Latest
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Child Safety, Free Speech, and Privacy Experts Tell Supreme Court: Texas’s Unconstitutional Age Verification Law Must be Overturned
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ACLU Cheers Ninth Circuit Decision to Block Content-Based Provisions of California Age-Appropriate Design Code Act
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How to Protect Consumer Privacy and Free Speech
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Rights Groups Urge U.S. Trade Representative to Reaffirm Commitment to a Free and Open Internet
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What's at Stake
As Americans spend more and more of their lives online, it’s vital that we protect the Internet from efforts to turn it into a privacy-free zone where our every keystroke and click is monitored and stored. It’s not just the government that is invading our privacy online, but also companies, which see money to be made in collecting detailed information about customers in order to build profiles on them.
If we do not enact protections for consumers, companies will continue to compete over who can spy on consumers the most intrusively. This is not the kind of “innovation” that will make our lives better. We need to put in place some basic common-sense protections that give consumers the privacy protections that they have made clear they want in poll after poll.
As Americans spend more and more of their lives online, it’s vital that we protect the Internet from efforts to turn it into a privacy-free zone where our every keystroke and click is monitored and stored. It’s not just the government that is invading our privacy online, but also companies, which see money to be made in collecting detailed information about customers in order to build profiles on them.
If we do not enact protections for consumers, companies will continue to compete over who can spy on consumers the most intrusively. This is not the kind of “innovation” that will make our lives better. We need to put in place some basic common-sense protections that give consumers the privacy protections that they have made clear they want in poll after poll.