Privacy

On a phone screen, there is a blur on everything except a blue button on the screen that says "READ THE PRIVACY POLICY."

Too often, our state's privacy laws have failed to keep up with new technologies. Our telephone service providers can tell the government what numbers we call, security cameras track our movements, and police scan our license plates. With the ACLU of Connecticut's advocacy, Connecticut became one of the first states to require police to get court permission before using "stingrays" to track private cellphone communications, and we helped to pass a law to prevent bosses from requesting employees' social media passwords as a condition of employment. We have pushed for greater protections for students' privacy in school and called for our state to pass laws to prevent police from using drones to spy without warrants. People should not have to choose between using new technologies and protecting our civil liberties. We work to ensure a future in which the Fourth Amendment ban on unreasonable searches extends to digital property and your data is your own.

The Latest

News & Commentary
There is a crowd of folks rallying for reproductive justice. The focus is on one femme-presenting person with a beanie and a sign up in the air that is a black poster that says "Our Voice is Our Power."

Slowing, Shutting Down, and Reversing Trump’s March to Autocracy

ACLU of Connecticut executive director David McGuire shares insight into how we can collectively act and organize to slow, shut down, and reverse the country's march towards autocracy under the Trump administration.
Press Release
Breaking News ACLU of Connecticut

ACLU of Connecticut Statement on AI Caucus and AI Legislation

The ACLU of Connecticut applauds the creation of the Artificial Intelligence Caucus to study and forward legislative priorities relating to artificial intelligence.
Issue Areas: Privacy
News & Commentary
ACLU-CT Smart Justice leader Terri Ricks stands in front of the CT State Capitol Building. She is wearing sunglasses and a rainbow face mask, and she holds a white sign that says, in blue letters, "FREEDOM JUST AHEAD."

Halfway through legislative session, here’s where things stand

Legislative session ends on June 9. As we head into the last weeks of session, the clock is ticking on all of these bills.
News & Commentary
In this photo illustration, Excelsior Pass app which provides digital proof of COVID-19 vaccination or negative test results seen displayed on a smartphone screen in front of the US flag.

There’s a Lot That Can Go Wrong With ‘Vaccine Passports’

Any proposal for vaccine credentials must be primarily paper-based, decentralized, and protect privacy.
Court Case
Apr 26, 2016

Vereen v. Ruffin and Vasquez

Court Case
Jan 16, 2015

Cash v. Town of East Haven et al