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Articles
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Gamers are protesting against censorship outside BlizzCon today. If you can’t be there, here’s how you can make your voice heard.
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Media Advisory: Gamers for Freedom to protest at Blizzcon
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More than 10,000 people call on Congress to investigate Amazon’s surveillance empire
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No Music for ICE: 800+ musicians now boycotting Amazon
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BlizzCon protesters announce online day of action October 29, calling on Game Developers & BlizzCon Sponsors to voice their support for political and human rights speech in advance of major rally
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More than 175 musicians pledge to boycott Amazon festivals and partnerships until they cancel ICE contracts
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No Music for ICE! Open letter from musicians to Amazon
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‘Facial recognition at festivals is dead’: artists and activists declare victory as 40+ major events state they have no plans to use the technology.
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Berkeley, CA becomes fourth US city to ban facial recognition
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Major protests planned at BlizzCon grow even louder after Blizzard’s “cowardly” decision to continue banning political speech
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Internet freedom activists call for “umbrella protest” at BlizzCon opposing company’s Hong Kong censorship decision
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Gamers for Freedom campaign challenges Blizzard’s censorship and pushed game companies to stand up for free speech
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NEW: 30+ civil rights organizations call on elected officials to stop Amazon’s doorbell surveillance partnerships with police
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Open letter calling on elected officials to stop Amazon’s doorbell surveillance partnerships with police
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Facial recognition at music festivals: new boycott calls on sponsors of Coachella and other AEG Presents events to pull out after company refuses to say whether they are using invasive surveillance.
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It’s time to fight for net neutrality again.
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Jeff Bezos brazenly admits Amazon wants to write its own facial recognition laws
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Amazon’s annual product launch fails to address privacy and surveillance concerns
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Amazon’s annual product launch overshadowed by growing backlash to surveillance-based business model
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Consumer and civil rights groups representing millions of people urge Congress to get real about privacy and pass strong protections