Celebrating 15 Years of Surveillance Self-Defense
Deeplinks 2024-03-04
Summary:
On March 3rd, 2009, we launched Surveillance Self-Defense (SSD). At the time, we pitched it as, "an online how-to guide for protecting your private data against government spying." In the last decade hundreds of people have contributed to SSD, over 20 million people have read it, and the content has nearly doubled in length from 40,000 words to almost 80,000. SSD has served as inspiration for many other guides focused on keeping specific populations safe, and those guides have in turn affected how we've approached SSD. A lot has changed in the world over the last 15 years, and SSD has changed with it.
The Year Is 2009
Let's take a minute to travel back in time to the initial announcement of SSD. Launched with the support of the Open Society Institute, and written entirely by just a few people, we detailed exactly what our intentions were with SSD at the start:
EFF created the Surveillance Self-Defense site to educate Americans about the law and technology of communications surveillance and computer searches and seizures, and to provide the information and tools necessary to keep their private data out of the government's hands… The Surveillance Self-Defense project offers citizens a legal and technical toolkit with tips on how to defend themselves in case the government attempts to search, seize, subpoena or spy on their most private data.

SSD's design when it first launched in 2009.
To put this further into context, it's worth looking at where we were in 2009. Avatar was the top grossing movie of the year. Barack Obama was in his first term as president in the U.S. In a then-novel approach, Iranians turned to Twitter to organize protests. The NSA has a long history of spying on Americans, but we hadn't gotten to Jewel v. NSA or the Snowden revelations yet. And while the iPhone had been around for two years, it hadn't seen its first big privacy controversy yet (that would come in December of that year, but it'd be another year still before we hit the "your apps are watching you" stage).
Most importantly, in 2009 it was more complicated to keep your data secure than it is today. HTTPS wasn't common, using Tor required more technical know-how than it does nowadays, encrypted IMs were the fastest way to communicate securely, and full-disk encryption wasn't a common feature on smartphones. Even for computers, disk encryption required special software and knowledge to implement (not to mention time, solid state drives were still extremely expensive in 2009, so most people still had spinning disk hard drives, which took ages to encrypt and usually slowed down your computer significantly).
And thus, SSD in 2009 focused heavily on law enforcement and government access with its advice. Not long after the launch in 2009, in the midst of the Iranian uprising, we launched the international version, which focused on the concerns of individuals struggling to preserve their right to free expression in authoritarian regimes.
And that's where S&l
Link:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2024/03/celebrating-15-years-surveillance-self-defenseFrom feeds:
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