S.T.O.P. x RadTech: Reproductive Freedom Under Surveillance
From the Organizers:
In this session, we’ll examine the potential criminalization of abortion and the threat of digital surveillance against pregnant people in a post-Roe landscape. What digital technologies may law enforcement use to track abortion seekers, providers, and advocates? How will surveillance escalate without the constitutional right to abortion?
We will also discuss paths forward to reduce the harm of Roe's potential overruling and digital strategies for pregnant people, providers, and advocates to stay safe on the internet.
Joined by reproductive and digital rights activists Hayley Tsukayama (Electronic Frontier Foundation) and Jolynn Dellinger (Duke Law). Moderated by S.T.O.P.'s Albert Fox Cahn.
Hayley Tsukayama is Senior Legislative Activist at the Electronic Frontier Foundation, focusing on state legislation. Prior to joining EFF, she spent nearly eight years as a consumer technology reporter at The Washington Post writing stories on the industry's largest companies.
Jolynn Dellinger is the Stephen and Janet Bear Visiting Lecturer and a Kenan Senior Fellow at Duke Law's Kenan Institute for Ethics, where she teaches privacy and ethics and does work in the area of ethical tech. In addition to teaching Privacy Law and Policy at Duke Law as a Senior Lecturing Fellow, Dellinger is an Adjunct Professor at UNC School of Law, a member of the Board of Directors for the Triangle Privacy Research Hub, and a member of the Future of Privacy Forum Advisory Board.
Thursday, June 23
6 pm ET
Where:
Online via Zoom
This event is organized not by EFF, but by S.T.O.P., a grassroots group participating in the Electronic Frontier Alliance. The EFA is a network of grassroots organizations across the country committed to promoting digital rights. Together, we're building a movement to promote freedom of expression, privacy, security, creativity, and access to knowledge.