Blog by Nasser Eledroos, technology fellow at the ACLU of Massachusetts

Employment opportunities in the technology industry are largely corporate. On the surface, these jobs seem fulfilling: great pay, opportunities for advancement, stock options, and other perks.

But where do you turn when you find that your dreams to innovate, engineer, and design a better future slam against the bleak reality that existing technologies often enable and facilitate great harm? What do you do when you find that the “efficiency engines” we’ve created end up subverting democracy, surveilling protected First Amendment activity, or deepening existing inequalities?

There’s a community of people and organizations, like the Ford Foundation, asking these same questions – a growing field – Public Interest Technology – where people are using their experience and skills in technology to change the world for the better. Public interest technology is exactly what it sounds like – technology used to serve justice and the public interest. Where almost any other corporate tech position has a fiduciary responsibility to maximize profit for shareholders, a public interest technologist is instead asked to service the public good.

My journey as a public interest technologist began with an abrupt transition out of the software engineering world and into a new role with the ACLU of Massachusetts. My very first day at the ACLU highlighted how technology can do good in the world: Day one involved me sifting through thousands of court records to determine how many cases had been dismissed as part of the single largest dismissal of wrongful convictions in the legal history of the United States. Central to those dismissals was the work of Paola Villarreal, the Technology Fellow who worked at the ACLU of Massachusetts before me. Paola’s work demonstrated that, contrary to the prosecutors’ claims, the majority of the tainted cases were for simple drug possession, and the vast majority were low-level cases tried in district courts. Public interest technologists design and deploy technology that serves people and solves problems – in this case, identifying tens of thousands of people who were wrongfully convicted based on tainted evidence.

Public interest tech is a field that’s still being defined, but like many other jobs in the non-profit world, it involves wearing many hats. During my time at the ACLU, I’ve supported the organization as a data scientist, systems administrator, forensics engineer, graphic designer, web developer, writer, advocate, IT specialist, geographic information system engineer, and public speaker. I’ve performed data-driven investigations into how police in Boston surveil people online, supported advocacy to remedy the Massachusetts drug lab scandals, led the data work on a grassroots statewide court watch project, and taught people about critical digital security practices. The different roles share a common thread: in organizations like the ACLU, technology can – and should – be used to ward off threats, entwine policy and computer science, and take full advantage of technology’s transformative potential.

I didn’t walk into the ACLU an expert in the above topics and issues. But my job afforded me the flexibility to take the time necessary to familiarize myself with the tools, policies, and skills I would need to succeed in this role. Traditional academic disciplines often aren't built to help students learn and apply technical expertise to advance the public interest – and that should change. This summer, the Ford Foundation convened university presidents, provosts, and faculty to explore pathways for people pursuing public interest technology, to bring institutional weight to the campaign to build this career path.

As technology continues to advance and outpace policy and law, there will be an ever-increasing need for public interest technologists. Decades ago, lawyers didn’t have a pipeline into policy and civil society; institutions purposefully built this path and called it public interest law. Technologists need to do the same today. Together, we can build a field that helps organizations and government agencies navigate issues of algorithmic bias, online surveillance, digital privacy, free expression, and more. Our collective future depends on the success of this initiative.

Interested in learning more? Visit the Ford Foundation or explore the ACLU of Massachusetts Technology for Liberty Project.

Date

Tuesday, December 11, 2018 - 9:00am

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This blog was written by Kade Crockford, director of the Technology for Liberty Program at the ACLU of Massachusetts. Originally posted on Privacy SOS.

Headed home for the holidays? If you have any down time this weekend, here are three simple things you can do with your family to firm up your digital security. 

  1. Install Privacy Badger on everyone’s web browsers. This neat browser extension, developed and maintained by the electronic privacy organization EFF, protects your privacy by blocking cookies that aim to track you across websites. It operates in the background and won’t interfere with your online activity. Once you install it (it’s free and only takes a minute), you can forget about it. Learn more about Privacy Badger, and find download links.
  2. Make and distribute webcam blockers. Cut up some post-it notes into little squares, and give them to everyone to put on their webcams (on front-facing cell phone cameras and webcams on computers). You never know who might be watching, so get to blocking those cameras.
  3. Download and install Signal, and create new family text groups! Signal is a free, secure texting and calling app that works on Androids and iPhones. While it lacks some of the latest fun features available in iMessage (like lasers and heart-reactions), it is the safest way to communicate with your family and friends. The app only works when both parties in a communication have it installed, so holidays are the perfect time to make sure everyone around the table can communicate securely. Download away!

In my family, we use a private message group to share photographs of the little ones. That way, we don’t compromise the kids’ privacy by sharing their sensitive digital images with companies like Facebook and Google, which profit off of our personal information. If you have little ones in your family, and you want them to have control over their own information, set up a private Signal group for select family and friends, and share away! Just make sure you clearly communicate to everyone in the group that your family has made the choice not to post images of the children on social media, and ask them to respect it.

Bonus: If you have more time and energy, help your family members do away with their bad password system and start using a password manager. There are lots of options to choose from. Password managers both increase your digital security and make your life easier. If you use one, you’ll only ever have to remember one password! Make it a good one.

 

Click here to learn more about protecting your privacy in the digital age.

Date

Wednesday, November 21, 2018 - 9:30am

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Attend this training to learn the basics of court watching, including how the state's criminal courts work and what to look for while you’re in the courtroom.

Become a trained court watcher and learn how to shift the power dynamics in our courtrooms by exposing the decisions judges and prosecutors make about neighbors everyday.

Attend a court watch training with Court Watch MA to learn about documenting what happens in th courtroom and gain a better understanding of how the decisions our district attorneys (DAs) make every day impact members of our communities.

In January, DAs across the state will begin a new term in office. Trained court watch volunteers will have the opportunity to monitor how well these elected prosecutors are living up to their campaign promises and complying with recently passed criminal justice reform, and help us hold them accountable for reducing pre-trial detention and addressing racial disparities. Information gathered through court watching also helps us push for changes in the policies and practices that lead to major racial disparities, excessive punishments, and over-incarceration.

These trainings are free and open to the public. All are welcome.

Event Date

Sunday, December 16, 2018 - 5:00pm to
Monday, December 17, 2018 - 6:45pm

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Families for Justice as Healing

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100R Warren Street
Roxbury, MA 02119
United States

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Sunday, December 16, 2018 - 7:00pm

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