Digital Rights Weekly | May 2 - 6

Team CommUNITY team at digitalrights.community
Fri May 6 18:04:03 CEST 2022


Hello Digital Rights Defenders!

Here is your weekly update on digital rights around the world for the
weeks of May 2 - 6. As a reminder,  you can submit your news for the
newsletter here: https://www.digitalrights.community/weekly-newsletter

###  Upcoming Virtual TCU Events ###

May 11 | LATAM Monthly Meetup
Los meetups mensuales Latinoamericanos son un espacio para charlar,
compartir proyectos, soltar un poco de estrés, contar buenas noticias
y ayudarnos entre todes a solucionar lo que podamos en las no tan
buenas.
https://internetfreedomfestival.org/wiki/index.php/11_de_Mayo,_2022_LATAM

May 12 | Glitter Meetup: Colour of Surveillance Europe Conference
Come and talk to EDRi, Controle Alt Delete and Bits of Freedom
https://internetfreedomfestival.org/wiki/index.php/May_12_2022_GM

May 18 | Lingua Cafe
Improve your language skills and connect with other digital rights defenders!
https://digitalrights.formstack.com/forms/linguacafe_7

June 16 | Digital Rights Job Fair
See description below


## Team CommUNITY Update ##

1. Join the Job Fair on June 16 for the Digital Rights Space!

We are hosting the first ever Digital Rights Job Fair! Come meet
leading organizations working at the intersection of human rights and
technology! Whether you are a seasoned professional or just starting
your career, this is a great opportunity to expand your network!
We have been adding more organizations to the mix! To RSVP and see the
complete list, visit:

https://digitalrights.formstack.com/forms/jobfair

_________________________________________________

### Digital Rights in the Community ###

1. Big Tech Scorecard is Live | The Ranking Digital Rights 2022

Each year, Ranking Digital Rights evaluates and ranks 14 of the
world’s most powerful digital platforms on their policies and
practices affecting people’s rights to freedom of expression and
privacy. For the sixth consecutive year, not one digital platform
earned a passing grade in their ranking.

While there is some progress, this is no time for business as usual.
Companies must do better to protect their users and the public
interest. Which companies commit to human rights? Who discloses the
most about how they moderate content? Where is your data safest in
case of a breach? Drill down into more than 300 aspects of company
policies to answer questions like these in the report’s interactive
Data Explorer.

https://rankingdigitalrights.org/index2022/


2. #KeepItOn | Internet Shutdowns in 2021 Report Released

The #KeepItOn report has been released, which looks at incidents of
internet shutdowns. Governments exploited shutdowns to exacerbate
crises, inflame wars, silence protests, manipulate elections, and
cover up atrocities. The findings show a dramatic increase in internet
shutdowns in 2021. During this year, at least 182 internet shutdown
incidents around the world in 34 countries were documented, as
compared to at least 159 shutdowns in 29 countries in 2020. There was
a global increase of 23 shutdowns from 2020 to 2021. India was
responsible for 106 incidents of shutdowns documented in 2021, making
it the world’s biggest offender for the fourth consecutive year.
Myanmar imposed the second highest total number of shutdowns in 2021
with 15 disruptions, followed by Sudan and Iran with five shutdowns in
each country.

https://www.accessnow.org/cms/assets/uploads/2022/04/2021-KeepItOn-Report-1.pdf


3. Call for Stories | Africana Futurism: Speculative Fiction from Africa

Pollicy is pleased to announce its 2022 Call for Submissions for its
inaugural short story collection from people living in Africa and of
African descent. This collection will explore how Africans living on
the continent are exploring, navigating and interacting with digital
technologies. The deadline for submission of manuscripts is May 31,
2022.

https://pollicy.org/events/call-for-stories-tell-me-a-story-about-your-personal-experience-with-technology/


4. Letter in Solidarity with Palestinian-German Dr. Anna-Esther Younes

A group of scholars, artists, activists and organizations are standing
together with Dr. Anna Esther-Younes. Younes, a Palestinian-German,
faces a targeted effort to exclude her from academic and public debate
in Germany. In November 2019, the Berlin Department for Research and
Information on Antisemitism (RIAS) prepared a secret file that patches
together distorted selections of Dr. Younes’s writings to defame her,
by claiming that her scholarly work supports Islamism, sexism, and by
extension anti-Semitism. This file now appears to have been circulated
to politicians and event organizers in order to exclude her from a
public debate on racism and right-wing extremism in Germany. The
purpose and method of information collection and sharing by RIAS did
not respect Dr. Younes’s fundamental right to privacy and resembles
State surveillance through a state-funded civil society organization.

You can read more and sign the petition here:
https://www.change.org/p/letter-in-support-of-dr-anna-esther-younes


5. 10 Recommendations for the World’s Democracies

Addressing the world’s democracies, the International Press Institute
wrote up this list of policy recommendations on what they can do to
strengthen press freedom at home and abroad. Those recommendations
include avoiding enacting or applying laws that can be modeled by
authoritarian regimes to restrict the press, refraining from engaging
in or enabling unlawful surveillance of journalists and civil society,
and ensuring regulation of social media and online spaces is
consistent with international human rights standards.

https://ipi.media/strengthening-press-freedom-at-home-and-abroad-10-recommendations-for-the-worlds-democracies/


6. Check out the BHR Group Job Board Mailing List!

The main goal of this list, which started in 2014, has been for people
to continue to be advocates for digital rights as they work in civil
society, industry, government, academia, press, think tanks, as
independent experts or activists, and beyond. They have roles that
cover the intersection of policy, law, and digital rights.

https://www.getrevue.co/profile/thebhrgroup/issues/the-bhr-group-digital-rights-careers-newsletter-issue-1-691997


7. HURIDOCS Knowledge Collaboration Resources to Document Violations

HURIDOCS has released a "knowledge collaboration" project that
co-creates resources with human rights defenders (HRDs) who are
documenting violations. Working with about 30 HRDs, the projects asked
them about the challenges they face, ideas and solutions, their
stories, and for their feedback on the resources curated from the
knowledge received. The result is a collection of 6 resources (guides,
worksheets, activities) on how to determine your database goals and
queries, design a conceptual data model, determine a controlled list
of terms, and create a data dictionary. All of these resources are
also available in Spanish.

https://huridocs.org/community-resources/

_________________________________________________

### Digital Rights Resources ###

1. Five Ways to Stay Online During an Internet Shutdown

Rest of World spoke to experts in privacy and security to get their
advice on the tools and tactics for skirting shutdowns. They
emphasized, above all, that the most important thing to do is plan.
Experts advise that if you live in a place where shutdowns are a risk
— and that risk is spreading — be prepared. Download VPNs and other
apps, be sure to have a contingency plan, and have a phone tree of
important people to call should something happen.

https://restofworld.org/2022/blackouts-five-ways-to-stay-online/#/intro


2. New Privacy Option on Google: Blocking Ads and Removing Some
Personal Information

Google has added an option for users to block ads about topics they
may not want to see. This includes blocking potentially sensitive
topics including pregnancy, parenting, dating, weight loss, alcohol
and gambling. They chose these categories based on user feedback. If
you’d like to update your own ad preferences, simply visit
myaccount.google.com and select “Date & Privacy” from the menu on the
left. From there, go to “Ad settings,” scroll down to “Sensitive Ad
categories” and click “See fewer” on the categories you wish to see
less of.

https://www.romper.com/life/google-block-ads-pregnancy-sensitive-topics
Google is also giving users the option to remove their personal
contact information — phone numbers, physical addresses and email
addresses — from the search results. The Alphabet-owned search giant
said on Wednesday that it is making the change to protect users from
"unwanted direct contact or even physical harm." Prior to the new
policy, people could ask for more specific information to be removed,
such as bank account or credit card numbers. The change comes amid a
surge in online fraud.

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/google-search-remove-phone-number-personal-information/


3. Book of the Day: How to Be a Woman Online

In her new book ‘How to Be a Woman Online’, Nina Jankowics shares
practical advice for those who, lacking institutional help, have to
address online harassment and abuse solely on their own. Jankowicz has
done extensive research on online abuse, where women face a
disproportionate amount of attacks online. These range from physical
insults to threats of violence, and they're forcing women – especially
younger ones – to censor themselves out of fear of physical or
emotional retribution. Listen to this conversation with her on NPR:

https://www.npr.org/2022/04/19/1093634753/how-to-be-a-woman-online-tackles-online-harassment-against-women

Women’s right to freedom of expression requires them to be equally
able to share their ideas and opinions – online and offline – without
censorship or fear of retaliation, which can drive them out of public
debate.

Also check out ARTICLE 19’s work, Equally Safe, on developing a
feminist, intersectional approach to keeping women safe online.

https://www.article19.org/equally-safe/

____________________________________________

### Digital Rights in the Wider World ###

1. More Pegasus Violations: Spanish Prime Minister's Phone infected

Spanish authorities have detected "Pegasus" spyware in the mobile
phones of Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez and Defense Minister Margarita
Robles. The government minister for the presidency, Felix Bolanos,
told a news conference that Sanchez's phone was infected in May 2021
and at least one data leak occurred then. He did not say who could
have been spying on the premier or whether foreign or Spanish groups
were suspected of being behind it. The infections had been reported to
the justice ministry and the High Court would be in charge of the
case. The quick responses to this Pegasus case was met with
frustration at the double standards. Citizen Lab revealed last week,
that 60 people linked to the Catalan independence movement had been
targets of "Pegasus" but the government response was not nearly as
serious in its investigations.
The European Union's data watchdog has called for a ban on Pegasus
over allegations it has been abused by client governments to spy on
rights activists, journalists and politicians.

https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/spanish-prime-ministers-telephone-infected-by-pegasus-spyware-2022-05-02/


2. In the Dark | New Country Profiles and Report from Rest of the World

Based on information from the past seven years in 60 countries and 935
internet shutdowns, Rest of the World released an extensive piece on
internet blackouts and how authoritarian regimes across the globe
repress dissent. They spoke to more than 70 technologists, telecoms
experts, activists, and journalists from around the world to track how
governments’ control over the internet has grown and evolved during
the past decade. These threats to a free and open internet come in
many forms, but most of the experts trace them back to a watershed
moment: 11 years ago in Cairo when the Egyptian government turned off
the internet when facing a mass protest movement that was evolving and
growing online.

https://restofworld.org/2022/blackouts/

They also released case studies on different countries based on
individual testimonies. For example, in Kashmir, they report on how
the Indian Government’s internet blackouts particularly stifled
Kashmir’s digital economy. The frequent, economically damaging
shutdowns exposes the hypocrisy runs counter to the Indian
government’s narratives of development in Kashmir.

https://restofworld.org/2022/blackouts-kashmir-digital-economy/

In Myanmar, the testimonies expand on the human rights catastrophe
hidden due to the internet blackouts. The Myanmar military shut down
the internet hours before it seized power in a military coup in
February 2021. Since then, it has routinely disrupted access across
the country. In many of the same townships where the military has
blocked the internet, it has also burned houses, launched airstrikes,
and raided villages, displacing tens of thousands of people. The
blackouts have disrupted the flow of news and communications that can
be vital for people when they are trying to flee to safety, hindered
humanitarian organizations’ attempts to respond to crises, and
hampered efforts to document human rights abuses and hold the military
accountable.

https://restofworld.org/2022/blackouts-myanmar-atrocities/


3. The Impact of Israel's Digital Surveillance Regime on Palestinians

New investigations reveal in stark detail Israeli authorities’
intensifying use of surveillance and predictive technologies to police
and control Palestinians. Subjecting Palestinians to such scrutiny
from security and military apparatuses narrows their expressive spaces
and plunges them into a state of constant anxiety. This abuse also
carries out a commercial purpose: Occupied Palestine effectively
functions as an open-air laboratory for Israel to test techniques of
espionage and surveillance before selling them to repressive regimes
around the world.

This piece gives a brief overview of the different sides where tech
and military intersect to intentionally disrupt Palestinian freedoms:

https://www.mei.edu/publications/nowhere-hide-impact-israels-digital-surveillance-regime-palestinians


3. Privacy Advocates in Western Countries Continue to Fight Facial
Recognition’s Securitization

Canada is trying to set clear laws to counter violations of human
rights and unlawful police use of facial recognition. Canada’s privacy
commissioners are calling for clear laws to place limits on the police
use of facial recognition technology. The Federal Privacy Commissioner
told Canadian MPs that the law should explicitly specify what purposes
police can use facial recognition for and ban other uses. They
criticized the fact that facial recognition is governed by a patchwork
of laws that “do not specifically address different uses or risks
posed by the technology.” They said “no-go” zones should include “a
prohibition on any use of facial recognition that can result in mass
surveillance.” If continuously drafted within the digital rights
framework, this could set a positive precedent for other nations to
follow suit.

This was also significantly influenced by Canada’s police use of
facial recognition from a Clearview AI’s database which violated the
Privacy Act. Clearview AI violated Canada’s private-sector privacy
laws by illegally amassing a database of more than three billion
images without user consent and then allowing customers, including the
Royal Canadian Mounted Police, to match photos against the database.
The company no longer offers its services in Canada.

https://nationalpost.com/news/politics/privacy-watchdogs-call-for-laws-limiting-police-use-of-facial-recognition

Law enforcement across the US uses social media accounts to access
online profiles. One of the many findings of an investigation launched
after the police killing of George Floyd is that Minneapolis police
used fake social media accounts to monitor Black individuals and
groups. According to the report, officers used “covert, or fake”
accounts to seek and gain access to the online profiles of Black
individuals including an unnamed City Council member and a state
elected official, as well as groups such as the Minneapolis NAACP and
Urban League. The activity included friend requests, comments on
posts, private messages and participation in discussions.

A 2016 survey by the Urban Institute and the International Association
of Chiefs of Police found that 70% of departments mined social
networks during investigations. In an ongoing study of police policies
in U.S. jurisdictions with at least 100,000 people, researchers at the
Brennan Center for Justice found just 35 police departments had
publicly available policies that in some way addressed the use of
social media for collecting information. Of those, 15 included some
limits on undercover, or covert online activity, but many were vague
or set a low bar for authorization. In Tennessee, a lawsuit by the
state chapter of the ACLU exposed the use of covert Facebook accounts
by Memphis officers to target activists of color and community justice
advocates.  California, the Brennan Center obtained records showing
that third-party social media monitoring companies had pitched their
services to the Los Angeles Police Department, including the ability
to create furtive accounts for officers.

https://www.fox21online.com/2022/05/02/report-calls-out-abuse-of-social-media-by-minneapolis-police/

Ireland has also agreed to share facial imagery of suspects and
convicted criminals with other European countries as part of an
expanded crime-fighting data-sharing system. The Irish Legislature
Oireachtas passed an update to the existing system and law enforcement
treaty of the EU Prum. It will enable Ireland to share police records
with other EU law enforcement agencies. The original Prum system
allowed member states to share DNA, fingerprint, and vehicle
registration data as part of investigations into specific crimes.
https://www.irishexaminer.com/news/arid-40862525.html


4. More Than 55 countries Sign “Declaration For the Future of the Internet”

The countries signed a pact to keep the internet freely accessible and
open. The move is designed to counter a growing trend of countries
enacting policies to block part or all of the internet. The
"Declaration for the Future of the Internet" commits signatories to
ensuring the internet is "open, free, global, interoperable, reliable,
and secure" and works as "a single, decentralized network of
networks." It outlines a number of broad goals around protecting human
rights, promoting competition, ensuring sustainability and refraining
from using the network as a tool for government surveillance.

https://www.axios.com/countries-sign-declaration-internet-freedom-55cdc865-893f-4f33-8b56-c04eae0e1844.html


5. SafeGraph Sells People’s Location Data from their visits to Planned
Parenthood Clinics

According to data purchased by Motherboard, SafeGuard, a location data
firm is selling information about people’s  visits to clinics that
provide abortions including Planned Parenthood facilities.  The
datashows where groups of people visiting the locations came from, how
long they stayed there, and where they then went afterwards. According
to its website, SafeGraph’s Patterns data aims to answer questions
like “how often people visit, how long they stay, where they came
from, where else they go, and more”. Its data is aggregated, meaning
it does not explicitly specify where a certain device moved to.
Instead, it focuses on the movements of groups of devices. However,
there are possibilities of unmasking individuals in allegedly
anonymized datasets.

SafeGraph ultimately obtains location data from ordinary apps
installed on peoples’ phones. Often app developers install code,
called software development kits (SDKs), into their apps that sends
users’ location data to companies in exchange for the developer
receiving payment. Sometimes app users don’t know that their phone—be
that via a prayer app, or a weather app—is collecting and sending
location data to third parties. SafeGraph then repackages that
location data and other data into various products. For example, the
CDC bought $420,000 worth of SafeGraph data for a laundry list of
COVID-19 and non-COVID-19 use cases.

SafeGraph classifies "Planned Parenthood" as a "brand" that can be
tracked, and the data Motherboard purchased includes more than 600
Planned Parenthood locations in the United States. The data included a
week's worth of location data for those locations in mid-April.
SafeGraph calls the location data product “Patterns.”

Following the SCOTUS leak that the landmark US abortion ruling Roe v.
Wade may be revoked, people seeking abortions who live in conservative
states and can afford to are likely to start traveling to get an
abortion. Location data could play into whether and how that travel is
identified, making it even more urgent for regulators and lawmakers to
consider how location data is collected, used, and sold.  The US could
see an increase in vigilante activity or forms of surveillance and
harassment against those seeking or providing abortions. The sale of
the location data raises questions around why companies are selling
data  about people’s visits to abortion clinics specifically, and
whether they should introduce more safeguards around the purchase of
that information, if at all.  Google banned SafeGraph from the Google
Play Store in June.

https://www.vice.com/en/article/m7vzjb/location-data-abortion-clinics-safegraph-planned-parenthood

____________________________

### Grants, Fellowships, & Awards ###

The following opportunities are open to individual digital rights
defenders and to organizations. If you would like us to include a
grant, fellowship or award in this newsletter, please email details to
team at digitalrights.community
https://internetfreedomfestival.org/wiki/index.php/Fundraising_Opportunities

Digital Freedom Fund
23 May - 1 July 2022
https://digitalfreedomfund.org/grants/

Internet Freedom Fund
Open Technology Fund
Deadline: Rolling Basis
https://www.opentech.fund/funds/internet-freedom-fund/

Rapid Response Fund
Open Tech Fund
Deadline: Rolling Basis
https://www.opentech.fund/funds/rapid-response-fund/

Rapid Response Fund
Derechos Digitales
Deadline: Rolling Basis
https://www.derechosdigitales.org/sobre-el-fondo-de-respuesta-rapida/

Urgent Action Fund for Women's Human Rights
Deadline: Rolling Basis
https://urgentactionfund.org/

Open Briefing’s Responsive Assistance
Deadline: Rolling Basis
https://www.openbriefing.org/support/referral/

Polis London School of Economics
Deadline: Rolling basis and closes April 28
https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/polis/2022/04/07/journalismai-2022/

_________________________________________________

### Global Events Calendar ###

Government Responses to Online Disinformation Across Sub-Saharan
Africa: A New Tool for Human Rights Defenders
May 10
https://www.gp-digital.org/event/government-responses-to-online-disinformation-across-sub-saharan-africa-a-new-tool-for-human-rights-defenders/

LATAM Monthly Meetup
May 11
https://internetfreedomfestival.org/wiki/index.php/11_de_Mayo,_2022_LATAM

Palestine Digital Activism Forum
May 17-19
https://pdaf.ps/pdaf2022

Lingua Cafe
May 18
https://digitalrights.formstack.com/forms/linguacafe_7

Communities of Practice: What’s new in Digital Citizen Engagement?
May 18
https://bit.ly/3s0xgei

The Wikimedia Hackathon 2022
May 20-22
https://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/Wikimedia_Hackathon_2022

CKS: Tor on Mobile Devices, Pluggable Transports / Snowflake
May 24
https://digitalrights.formstack.com/forms/cks56

Communities of Practice: Lessons and considerations for the civic tech community
May 26
https://bit.ly/3vUZA2N

Virtual School of Internet Governance - French Version
May 2022
http://www.virtualsig.org/

Check out a list of our virtual events here:
https://internetfreedomfestival.org/wiki/index.php/Calendar_of_Events
_________________________________________________

### NEW Job Opportunities  ###

Below is a short list of jobs we have been sent in the last week.

Want to see more jobs? OR Have a job opening you want us to promote?
Check out the Team CommUNITY Job Board:
https://www.digitalrights.community/job-board

✎ Research and Communications Associate, Equity in Civic Technology
Project | The Center for Democracy and Technology
+ Washington, DC, USA
https://cdt.org/job/research-and-communications-associate-equity-in-civic-technology-project/

✎ Foundation Coordinator | Internet Society Foundation
+ USA or America Latina, open to Remote
https://internetsociety.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=180

✎ Director of Organizing | Kairos
+ Remote
https://kairosfellowship.recruitee.com/o/director-of-organizing

✎ Senior iOS Developer | Horizontal
+ Remote
https://wearehorizontal.org/job-post-sr-ios.html

✎ Senior Android Developer | Horizontal
+ Remote
https://wearehorizontal.org/job-post-sr-android.html

✎ Full Stack Developer | Horizontal
+ Remote
https://wearehorizontal.org/job-post-fullstack.html

✎ Product Manager | Horizontal
+ Remote, in the Global South
https://wearehorizontal.org/job-post-product.html

✎ Decentralized Storage and Privacy Researcher | OpenArchive
+ Remote
https://open-archive.org/RJob

✎ Android Developer | OpenArchive
+ Remote
https://open-archive.org/AndroidDevJob

✎ 开发现代反审查Web系列 / Develop modern anti-censorship websites | GreatFire
+ Remote
https://www.upwork.com/freelance-jobs/apply/Web-Develop-modern-anti-censorship-websites_~015e032e743c9c1f00/

✎ Communications Manager (Chinese/English) | GreatFire
+ Remote
https://docs.google.com/document/d/12KmWY1xP4DIfNuxSCW7Un-QWlMgVG_Fk2PiwUgACfdQ/edit

✎ Director Of Engineering | Tor Project
+ Remote
https://www.torproject.org/about/jobs/director-of-engineering/

✎ Mobile Engineer (iOS or Android) - Privacy Apps | Cloudflare
+ Remote in Portugal
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4052324?gh_jid=4052324

✎ Software Engineer - Privacy Edge | Cloudflare
+ Remote in Portugal
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4078269?gh_jid=4078269

✎ Mobile Engineer (iOS or Android) - Privacy Apps | Cloudflare
+ Remote in UK
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4052337?gh_jid=4052337

✎ Software Engineer - Privacy Edge | Cloudflare
+ Remote in UK
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4078270?gh_jid=4078270

✎ Mobile Engineer (iOS or Android) - Privacy Apps | Cloudflare
+ Remote in USA
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4026321?gh_jid=4026321

✎ Software Engineer - Privacy Edge | Cloudflare
+ Remote in USA
https://boards.greenhouse.io/cloudflare/jobs/4078268?gh_jid=4078268

✎ Director, Special Events (Gala) | PEN America
+ Los Angeles, USA
https://pen.org/about-us/employment-opportunities/director-special-events-gala/

✎ Director, Special Events (Gala) | PEN America
+ Los Angeles, USA
https://pen.org/about-us/employment-opportunities/director-special-events-gala/

✎ Director, Los Angeles | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/los-angeles-director/

✎ Assistant, Digital Communications | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/assistant-digital-communications/

✎ Senior Director, Communications | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/senior-director-communications/

✎ Deputy Director, Media relations | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/deputy-director-media-relations/

✎ Database manager/Administrator | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/about-us/employment-opportunities/database-manager/

✎ Assistant, Free Expression Programs | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/free-expression-programs-assistant/

✎ Director US, Free Expression Programs | PEN America
+ New York, USA
https://pen.org/us-free-expression-programs-director/

✎ Senior manager, Freedom read project | PEN America
+ New York, Washington, D.C., USA and remote considered
https://pen.org/senior-manager-freedom-to-read-project/

✎ Program director of disinformation and community engagement | PEN America
+ Florida, Texas, or Arizona, or at PEN America’s offices in New York,
Washington, D.C., or Los Angeles, USA
https://pen.org/program-director-disinformation-and-community-engagement/

✎ Program manager of journalism and disinformation | PEN America
+ New York, Washington, D.C., USA
https://pen.org/program-manager-journalism-and-disinformation/

✎ Deputy Director | Mosaic
+ San Francisco, CA
https://job.ceaconsulting.com/jobs/deputy-director-san-francisco-ca-106572

✎ Licensing and Compliance Manager | Free Software Foundation
+ Boston, MA, USA
https://www.fsf.org/news/fsf-job-opportunity-licensing-and-compliance-manager

✎ Communications and Advocacy Advisor | Internet Society
+ West Africa - Central Africa
http://internetsociety.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=179

✎ Senior Global Movement Communications Specialist (European Region) |
Wikimedia Foundation
+ Remote
https://grnh.se/e124268b1us

✎ Senior Advisor, Indigenous Community Connectivity | Internet Society
+ Remote, USA and/or Canada
https://internetsociety.bamboohr.com/jobs/view.php?id=178

✎ Accounting Administrator, Part-Time | Simply Secure
+ Remote, USA
https://simplysecure.org/hiring/accounting-administrator-10hrs-week/

✎ Finance & Operations Manager | Simply Secure
+ Remote, USA
https://simplysecure.org/hiring/finance-operations-manager/

✎ Digital Support Helpdesk Specialist | Internews Global Technology Hub
+ London, UK
https://phf.tbe.taleo.net/phf04/ats/careers/v2/viewRequisition?org=INTERNEWS&cws=38&rid=1734

✎ Multiple Positions | Mnemonic
+ Berlin or Remote
https://mnemonic.org/en/about/jobs#project-manager---sudan

Need to unsubscribe or change your address?
Head to https://lists.ghserv.net/mailman/options/festival and enter
your email address.

If you feel like sending some digital glitter our way, or need further
assistance, feel free to reply to this message.
_________________________________________________

### Know someone that wants to subscribe to our newsletter? ###

They can sign up athere:
https://www.digitalrights.community/weekly-newsletter

### Want to partner with us?###

If you have any questions or want to learn more about partnerships,
get in touch at team at digitalrights.community. We are always looking
for like-minded organizations and people.

(((Hugs & light)))

--
Team CommUNITY at ARTICLE 19
www.digitalrights.community
Organizers of the Internet Freedom Festival
PGP: 2E1D CC33 A362 0BD6 236E  540A F60A 89AD 6FF9 7A2F

You can now submit your news for the Digital Rights weekly directly.
To post your job opportunities, submit your opportunities to our Job Board.



More information about the Festival mailing list