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.
Privacy
Vereen v. Ruffin and Vasquez
April 26, 2016
Cash v. Town of East Haven et al
January 16, 2015
SB 1068, An Act Concerning the Department of Public Health’s Recommendations Regarding a Human Immunodeficiency Virus Pre-Exposure Prophylaxis and Post-Exposure Prophylaxis Drug Assistance Program
April 5, 2023SR 42, A Resolution Proposing a State Constitutional Amendment Concerning a Right to Privacy
April 5, 2023SB 3 3, An Act Concerning Online Privacy, Data, and Safety Protections and an Employer’s Duty to Disclose Known Instances of Sexual Harassment or Assault Committed By an Employee When Making Employment Recommendations
April 5, 2023