Amazon thinks they can create the perfect workforce by surveilling them into submission. With AI cameras, tracking devices, thermal cameras, and scanners everywhere they have made a massive investment in monitoring and control. static1.squarespace.com/static/5e449c8…
It gets worse. Amazon employs a team of former U.S. intelligence and military agents to spy on workers. The team compiles confidential reports tracking worker organizing, media interviews, and planned protests/strikes in order to stop worker organizing vice.com/en_us/article/…
Last week, Senators Brown and Wyden wrote a letter calling on Amazon to stop spying on their workers. A letter is a good first step but we need laws to end invasive workplace surveillance. brown.senate.gov/newsroom/press…
Surveillance has a variety of harms on society and workers. Workers exist in a constant state of panic impacting their mental health. Pressure to avoid second by second performance warnings spurs workers to take risky actions resulting in increased injuries & other health issues.
We can’t allow this to continue. Surveillance sets up power imbalances between employers and workers that impedes workers basic rights. People have the right to work in surveillance-free, safe working environments.
Congress is interested in putting an end to this. If ONE congressperson presents a law to end invasive workplace surveillance, there is a real opportunity.
But we need to build momentum before Amazon’s army of lobbyists kills any potential for real reform of their dangerous worker surveillance and manipulation practices.
Sign the petition to stop invasive workplace surveillance. actionnetwork.org/petitions/stop…
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Tomorrow, @InternetArchive will file their reply brief in the suit from major publishers to end the right of IA and all libraries to own and preserve spyware-free digital books.
Reading what they’re replying to, we’ve gotta ask:
Who is the real "Napster" here?
A thread.
What the Archive’s book library does is scan paper books to make their own digital copies so that they can loan them without letting tech companies and publishing conglomerates spy on readers. fightforthefuture.org/news/2023-12-0…
And loan such books out in a 1-to-1 ratio, just like they would the paper book sitting in their warehouse, without paying totally atrocious licensing fees over and over. ebooksforus.com
@SenSchumer + @SpeakerPelosi are poised to put special interests before people by ramming through the so-called Journalism Competition and Protection Act.
Instead of holding big tech accountable by bringing #AICOA and #OAMA to a vote as @SenSchumer promised, we are hearing that he’s looking to put a handout to Murdoch, Alden Capital, and Gannett in the National Defense Authorization Act. Why you should be outraged, a thread.
The #JCPA is a pro-monopoly bill, allowing news publishers to form a cartel and demand payment for any links to their content. It’s must-carry, and must-pay, no matter how extreme the content. That's why 20+ civil society and library groups opposed.
NEW: ❤️Fight and @MediaJustice are calling on MGM to cancel their new show, Ring Nation. This trainwreck will use video from Ring cameras to sell surveillance to viewers.
There are so many reasons civil rights groups agree that Ring is dangerous. hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/ed-…
Ring Nation tries to put a friendly face on a dangerous product.
Ring is the figurehead of Amazon’s surveillance empire. Its cameras capture the whereabouts and actions of millions and share warrantless surveillance data with the police. theguardian.com/commentisfree/…
Ring’s DIY surveillance toolkit gives racists a platform to criminalize people of color, and anti-choicers a network to surveil and report abortion seekers.
Will Ring Nation air soundbites of racial profiling? Of hateful anti-abortion confrontations? vice.com/en/article/qvy…
1/6: Creepy surveillance tools are spreading like wildfire across school campuses.
Since moving to remote learning, students like Aaron Ogletree have been forced to show school admin and other students their bedrooms every time they take a test. Aaron sued—and yesterday, he won.
2/6: In a landmark victory, a federal judge in Ohio ruled that remote “room scans” are a warrantless search under the 4th Amendment. These scans use a student’s webcam to probe their room (usually their bedroom 🙃) & are a gross privacy violation.
3/6 This is big. Students like Aaron now have the tools to fight eproctoring tools like Honorlock, Proctorio, and Respondus that invade their private lives, force them to adopt weird behavior to pass an AI check, and discriminate based on race and ability. theverge.com/2022/8/23/2331…
Today is #AntitrustDay, and nonprofits, tech companies, and internet users are uniting in calling on Congress to end Big Tech’s abusive monopolies. We can’t restructure our relationship with tech until we have antitrust laws. Contact lawmakers now. antitrustday.org
The bad provisions in the #InfrastructureBill might be the law, but the fix bill these Senators have introduced is a clear signal:
🔥The fight for a common sense approach to new tech that doesn't entrench Zuck as Ruler of web3 is not over.
We drove 40,000+ calls to the Senate on this issue and we are being heard. The Chair of the Senate Finance Committee is taking a stand, will your Rep join him? Find out: dontkillcrypto.com