Centering Civil Rights in the Privacy Debate

In our increasingly digitized world, it is critical to protect individuals’ privacy. As policymakers consider passing meaningful privacy legislation, civil rights protections are a critical but mostly overlooked component. To have effective privacy legislation, we must ensure that companies’ data practices do not violate individuals’ civil rights—especially when it comes to marginalized communities. Problematic commercial data practices disproportionately harm people of color—especially Black and Brown communities—women, immigrants, religious minorities, members of the LGBTQ+ community, low-income individuals, and other marginalized communities. Centering these communities in this work helps us understand exactly how high the stakes are and underscores the need for solutions that directly mitigate these harms. Without civil rights protections adapted for the twenty-first century, the discriminatory data practices adopted by online companies will continue to have long-lasting, severe consequences.


Centering Civil Rights in the Privacy Debate