- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- technology@lemmy.world
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/1106187
Here’s how EFF desribes the situation in You Can Help Stop These Bad Internet Bills
“Red alert! For the last six months, EFF, our supporters, and dozens of other groups have been sounding the alarm about several #BadInternetBills that have been put forward in Congress.We’ve made it clear that these bills are terrible ideas, but Congress is now considering packaging them together—possibly into must-pass legislation. I’m asking you to join us, ACLU, Fight for the Future, and other digital rights defenders in a week of action to protect the internet.”
Can the fediverse help? The fediverse has some potential advantages for activism on topics like privacy, digital rights, and LGBTQIA2S+ issues. So it’s worth experimenting, and the July 20-28 week of action on Bad Internet Bills is a great opportunity – to learn, and hopefully to have an impact as well.
Here’s four easy ways to help:
- Upvote and boost posts in !bad_internet_bills@lemmy.sdf.org – and cross-post them to other communities and magazines where they’re on-topic
- On Mastodon, boost posts on the #BadInternetBills and #KOSA hashtags
- Get the word out on other social networks too
- If you live in the US, contact your legislators using Fight for the Future’s https://www.badinternetbills.com/
Congress has been trying to destroy the Internet for almost as long as the Internet has been publicly available. No matter how many times it fails and the Internet survives, it always comes back and tries again, over and over, forever. I fear it’s only a matter of time before it succeeds.
And make no mistake, a law against end-to-end encryption will make cybersecurity in general illegal, leaving every online operation wide open to attack by cybercriminals. Such a law won’t merely take away your privacy; it’ll take away the Internet altogether.
They finally successfully killed net neutrality under Ajit Pai (motherfucker). They’ve been incrementally changing things up since then so that people don’t notice and complain.