
It’s time to rein in Pegasus and halt spying on journalists
The United States could do more to combat spyware used by governments to surveil the press
The United States could do more to combat spyware used by governments to surveil the press
Anti-press lawmakers are attacking the press by yanking contracts to publish public notices or ending requirements to publish notices in newspapers entirely
Police seizure of journalists’ equipment outside the newsroom should draw just as much outrage as the raid on the Marion County Record
GoFundMe blocked a publisher and won’t say why. Payment processors should be transparent about decisions to freeze or ban accounts
Federal law limits searches and seizures of journalistic materials, but state law can give even greater protections.
Journalists and the public need to know officers’ identities to hold them accountable for their official actions
Three ways you can support the Marion County Record and press freedom
Federal courts should continue remote audio access to trials and hearings for public and press
The Nevada Supreme Court should bar the search of murdered reporter’s devices
The NYPD is the latest force to join this anti-transparency trend