Prostitution Surveillance Tower Goes Up in San Diego
Warrantless surveillance, Comic Con "sex trafficking," and the persistence of trafficking myths
Warrantless surveillance, Comic Con "sex trafficking," and the persistence of trafficking myths
We're entering peak stupidity with "election interference" claims.
Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.
The Kids Online Safety Act would have cataclysmic effects on free speech and privacy online.
The group reportedly faked rescue stories—including one involving a baby saved from traffickers—and lied about where funds were going.
The party platform previously called for a constitutional amendment to protect unborn children. Now, it says abortion should be left to the states.
In a "novel" order concerning the app NGL, the agency takes aim at online anonymity and at minors on social media.
The original version was overly punitive.
And the Supreme Court agrees to weigh in.
The Court is remanding these two cases for more analysis—but it made its views on some key issues clear.
Two years after the Dobbs decision, Americans are increasingly concerned with how abortion bans affect women with wanted pregnancies.
X's child porn detection system doesn’t violate an Illinois biometric privacy law, the judge ruled.
We need parents with better phone habits, not more government regulation of social media.
Prosecutors say the Buenos Aires Yoga School was a sex trafficking cult, but the alleged victims say this isn't true.
The plaintiffs hope to "help Republicans and conservatives see why this ban is inconsistent with the free speech values they say they care about."
It's the contraception mandate in reverse, with no exception for religious employers.
A journalism industry trade group is asking the federal government to thwart a tech tool that could make news publishing less profitable.
The war on drugs meets abortion...
A new labor law getting bad press is explicitly drafted to stop sex businesses from punishing workers who set boundaries.
New bipartisan legislation would sunset Section 230 after next year.
The company's confusing statements about how ChatGPT should respond to sexual prompts
Congress is "silencing the 170 million Americans who use the platform to communicate," the company argues.
It's the war on drugs all over again, folks...
"We will continue to fight for the right to access the internet without intrusive government oversight," says the group challenging the law.
How the Backpage prosecution helped create a playbook for suppressing online speech, debanking disfavored groups, and using "conspiracy" charges to imprison the government's targets
There are no good sides in today's Supreme Court case concerning the EMTALA and abortion.
An interview with Consumer Choice Center Deputy Director Yaël Ossowski.
A Section 702 reauthorization moving through Congress could actually weaken privacy protections.
Teens who use social media heavily also spend the most in-person time with friends.
The civil liberties lawyer talks to Reason about the misguided impulse to attack free speech in the name of protecting women.
"There were many of us who opposed censoring pornography...precisely because of our commitment to feminist goals and principles," says the former ACLU chief.
A new survey highlights how fear-based parenting drives phone-based childhoods.
If you fail to see a problem with Apple's actions, you may not be an overzealous government lawyer.
The company leaves Texas over an “ineffective, haphazard, and dangerous” age-verification law.
Another blow to the idea that algorithms are driving our political dysfunction.
Employing an 18- to 20-year-old at an adult venue could mean 15 years in prison, even if the young person used a fake ID.
A new bill would ban TikTok and give the president power to declare other social media apps off limits.
Allowing surrogacy brokers to be paid is good. Allowing surrogates themselves to be paid would be better.
A federal judge in an ongoing case called the porn age-check scheme unconstitutional. Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton doesn't seem to care.
These aren't outright bans. But they still can chill free speech and academic freedom.
State Supreme Court Chief Justice Tom Parker cited the Bible to explain why.
And a federal judge just said so.
Banning people under age 16 from accessing social media without parental consent "is a breathtakingly blunt instrument" for reducing potential harms, the judge writes.
Sen. Mike Lee's "technological exploitation" bill also redefines consent.
AI tools churning out images of fake IDs could help people get around online age-check laws.
For sex workers and their clients, Super Bowl season can mean a higher chance of getting nabbed by cops.