Featured Items
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On Torture: The New York Times Gets the Right Result for the Wrong Reasons
I’ve been trying to feel good about the New York Times’ decade-late decision to call torture torture—that is, to “deploy the English language to describe things,” as the Washington Post’s Erik Wemple memorably put it. Obviously, late is better than never, and I don’t see how a reasonable person …
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Why It's Vital For Users to Fund Open-Source Encryption Tools
We’ve been crowd-funding donations for several open-source encryption tools for two months now. We've discussed before why these tools are so important from a press freedom perspective, but we’ve also repeatedly heard one question from readers who have come across the campaign for the first time: “why should I …
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Why Fighting for Hard-Hitting, Nonprofit News May Mean Taking on the IRS
When we think about journalism coming under attack by the government we rarely think about the Internal Revenue Service. We think about the persecution of whistleblowers, over classification of documents, increasing secrecy and surveillance, and an utter disregard for Freedom of Information requests. We think about threats, harassment and detainment …