In January 2012 we defeated the SOPA and PIPA censorship legislation
with the largest Internet protest in history. A year ago this month one
of that movement's leaders, Aaron Swartz, tragically passed away.
Today we face a different threat, one that undermines the Internet,
and the notion that any of us live in a genuinely free society: mass
surveillance.
If Aaron were alive, he'd be on the front lines, fighting against a
world in which governments observe, collect, and analyze our every
digital action.
Now, on the eve of the anniversary of Aaron's passing, and in
celebration of the win against SOPA and PIPA that he helped make
possible, we are announcing a day of protest against mass surveillance,
to take place this February 11th.
Press release:
A broad coalition of activist groups, companies, and online platforms
will hold a worldwide day of activism in opposition to the NSA's mass
spying regime on February 11th. Dubbed "The Day We Fight Back", the day
of activism was announced on the eve of the anniversary of the tragic
passing of activist and technologist Aaron Swartz. The protest is both
in his honor and in celebration of the victory over the Stop Online
Piracy Act two years ago this month, which he helped spur.
Participants including Access, Demand Progress, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation, Fight for the Future, Free Press, BoingBoing,
Reddit, Mozilla, ThoughtWorks, and more to come, will join potentially
millions of Internet users to pressure lawmakers to end mass
surveillance -- of both Americans and the citizens of the whole world. . . .
HOW INTERNET USERS CAN HELP:
Visit TheDayWeFightBack.org
Sign up to indicate that you'll participate and receive updates.
Sign up to install widgets on websites encouraging its visitors to
fight back against surveillance. (These are being finalized in coming
days.)
Use the social media tools on the site to announce your participation.
Develop memes, tools, websites, and do whatever else you can to participate -- and encourage others to do the same.
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