UCLA Center for Critical Internet Inquiry, C2i2.
Interdisciplinary, intersectional research center committed to reimagining technology; championing social, racial, and economic justice; and, strengthening democracy with culture-making and public policy work.
Amazing Mind Reader Reveals His 'Gift'
(Duval Guillaume, Sept 24, 2012, 2:28 mins.)
Amazon's Accent Recognition Technology Could Tell the Government Where You're From (Bell Lin, The Intercept, Nov 15, 2018)
Another website is broadcasting your personal info to anyone who searches your name (Kate Irby, Miami Herald, May 12, 2017)
Art projects about privacy, computer vision, and surveillance (Adam Harvey, 2020)
Atlas of Surveillance: Documenting Police Tech in Our Communities with Open Source Research (Electronic Frontier Foundation)
The big biz of spying on little kids (Stephanie Simon, Politico, May 15, 2014)
Do I Need an RFID-Blocking Sleeve for My Credit Card? (Stacy Johnson, MoneyTalks, Feb 10, 2020)
Ethical, easy-to-use and privacy-conscious alternatives to well-known software (Switching.software)
"The Goal is to Automate Us": Welcome to the Age of Surveillance Capitalism (John Naughton, The Guardian, Jan. 20, 2019)
How to use Facebook privacy settings (Thomas Germain, Consumer Reports, Oct 7, 2020)
Security Education Companion (Electronic Frontier Foundation: Surveillance Self-defense). Free resource for digital security educators.
Social media’s silent filter (Sarah T. Roberts, The Atlantic, March 8, 2017)
Surveillance Giants: How the Business Model of Google and Facebook Threatens Human Rights (Amnesty International, 2019)
Twelve million phones, one dataset, zero privacy (Stuart A. Thompson, NY Times, Dec 19, 2019)
Twisted Toys: Exposes the surveillance, exploitation and risk in the digital world for children (Giovanna Mascheroni & Andra Siibak)
White Collar Crime Risk Zones. White Collar Crime Risk Zones uses machine learning to predict where financial crimes are mostly likely to occur across the USA.
Wrongfully Arrested Because Face Recognition Can't Tell Black People Apart (Victoria Burton-Harris & Philip Mayor, ACLU, June 24, 2020)
Your Amazon Echo Will Share Your Wireless Network With Neighbors, Unless You Opt Out (Laurel Wamsley, NPR, June 4, 2021)
Inside the Suspicion Machine: Obscure government algorithms are making life-changing decisions about millions of people around the world. Here, for the first time, we reveal how one of these systems works. (Wired, March 6, 2023)
The End of Privacy as we Know it? (The Daily, NY Times, Feb. 10, 2020)
Governments are Spying on the People Who Bring Us the News (CounterSpin, FAIR, Janine Jackson, July 31, 2021)
How Tech Companies Track Your Every Move and Put Your Data Up for Sale (Dave Davies, Fresh Air:NPR, July 31, 2019, 36 mins.)
Right to be Forgotten (Molly Webster & Bethel Habte, WNYC Studios: Radiolab, Aug 23, 2019, 50:21 mins.)
We Were Warned: The Climate Emergency and the Surveillance State (Intercepted, Jeremy Scahill, Sept. 25, 2019)
Wrongfully accused by Facial Recognition and an Algorithm (The Daily, NY Times, Aug. 3, 2020)
Coded Bias by Shalini Kantayya (2020) Netflix
In the Age of AI (Frontline, Nov. 5, 2019)
John Oliver on Facial Recognition (Last Week Tonight, June 15, 2020)
The Global Spyware Scandal: Exposing Pegasus on PBS Frontline. (2 part documentary, 2023)
Bad Input (Three short videos by Consumer Reports, that look at how biases in algorithms and data sets result in unfair practices for communities of color, often without their knowledge, 2023)
Search Engine Breakdown: Are Algorithms Racist and Sexist? (NOVA PBS, 20:34)