Internet users in Pakistan may have noticed that YouTube no longer appears to be persona non grata. The extremely popular video-sharing website, banned in 2012 by […]
The United Nations’ Special Rapporteur on freedom of opinion and expression, Mr. David Kaye, recently shared with the Government of Pakistan his concerns with the draft […]
ISLAMABAD, NOVEMBER 27, 2015: Digital Rights Foundation organized its second National conference in collaboration with Privacy International on The Right to Privacy in the Digital Age […]
Pakistan’s insistence on complete and total access to the personal data of its citizens will see Blackberry ceasing operations by the end of 2015. In July […]
Joint Statement from ARTICLE 19, Association for Progressive Communications, Digital Rights Foundation, Human Rights Watch, Privacy International, and others on the Prevention of Electronic Crimes Bill […]
This blog post was originally published on Electronic Frontier Foundation’s website. It is a truth universally acknowledged that a government, in the wake of a national […]
In the wake of Snowden, it has become important for large tech corporations to be transparent about their interactions with governments ie requests to either access […]
People of Lahore! The Digital Rights Foundation is partnering with The Last Word to shed light on the highly controversial upcoming cybercrime bill, and how its […]
Lahore, October 27, 2015: Freedom House’s Freedom on the Net report, conducted in 60 countries, examines the civil liberty, freedom and censorship trends in Pakistan over […]