From Center for Democracy & Technology <[email protected]>
Subject CDT’s Spotlight on Protecting Reproductive Health Information
Date July 27, 2022 8:01 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
We are fighting to protect your privacy


([link removed])


The Dobbs decision has far-reaching implications, for all of us.

Late last month, the Supreme Court passed down its decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, overturning almost fifty years of constitutional protections for reproductive health embodied in Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pa. v. Casey.
In response ([link removed]), Alexandra Reeve Givens, President & CEO of the Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT), said, “This ruling is devastating for the privacy rights of people seeking reproductive care. Historically, we have looked to the court to expand and protect our rights—not take them away.”



As reproductive rights organizations are focused on the critical work of directly serving people in need of reproductive health care, CDT is focusing on tech policy: ways to protect the data and access to information of people seeking — and providing — reproductive care.



Post-Dobbs, a number of state laws have gone into effect limiting or eliminating the ability to access and provide abortion services. States that want to vigorously enforce these laws now have a strong incentive to seek all kinds of data, including location and health data, about people who could potentially violate those laws. Such a regime will lead to unprecedented monitoring of people engaged in some of the most intimate activities and choices that a person can make. Health care-related monitoring can reach a variety of actors for a variety of purposes: medical providers who perform abortions, those seeking abortions, those who help people seeking abortions, people who have miscarriages or other reproductive health issues, people engaged in family planning, and those who try to provide basic information and education about services.



In this new environment, companies’ data practices,
gaps in laws like HIPAA ([link removed]), and
loopholes that law enforcement exploits ([link removed])
to circumvent warrant requirements need fixing. Any company that collects data can
take action now ([link removed])
to protect their users by limiting the collection, retention, sale, transfer, and other uses of information that can be used to generate insights or predictions about a person’s reproductive health. Companies can also encrypt data both internally and for users, and ensure that content moderation policies, practices, and algorithms support access to information related to reproductive health. Finally, companies can and should adopt clear and consistent standards for refusing overbroad requests by law enforcement, notify users of such requests in a timely way, and publicly report the number of these requests.



As a direct result of the Dobbs decision, CDT has created a
dedicated task force ([link removed])
to address the tech policy issues that are now even more prominent than before. The Task Force on Protecting Reproductive Health Information will address data protection and content moderation issues, and function as a discussion forum. CDT and Task Force members will be able to bring issues of concern to the group regarding reproductive health care-related civil and criminal matters, and questions of content moderation.


([link removed])


READ ([link removed])

Press Release | Supreme Court Abortion Ruling “Devastating” for Women’s Right to Privacy


([link removed])


READ ([link removed])

Proposed Consumer Privacy Framework for Health Data


([link removed])


READ ([link removed])

Report | Legal Loopholes and Data for Dollars: How Law Enforcement and Intelligence Agencies Are Buying Your Data from Brokers


([link removed])


READ ([link removed])

Following the Overturning of Roe v Wade, Action is Needed to Protect Health Data



Unfortunately, we know that criminalizing abortion will have outsized impact on the rights of communities already disproportionately impacted by policing and data discrimination, including people of color, LGBTQIA+ people, and disabled people. Those who support reproductive rights must come together to protect the privacy of those seeking and providing reproductive care.



CDT has spent years advocating for you. We have been at the forefront of efforts to improve commercial data practices, and to advocate for reasonable limits on law enforcement access to data. Partners like you have been indispensable in this work. If you are not yet engaged and want to learn more, please reply to this email to join the conversation. You can help put democracy and human rights at the center of the digital revolution.


LEARN MORE ([link removed])




([link removed])
([link removed])
% link:[link removed] name="[link removed]" content="" %]
% link:[link removed] name="[link removed]" content="" %]


#CONNECT WITH CDT


SUPPORT OUR WORK ([link removed])


[Manage]([link removed]) your preferences | [Opt Out]([link removed]) using TrueRemove™
Got this as a forward? [Sign up]([link removed]) to receive our future emails.
View this email [online]([link removed]).

1401 K St NW Suite 200 | Washington, DC xxxxxx US

This email was sent to [email protected].
To continue receiving our emails, add us to your address book.


([link removed])
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis