Open Rights Group is the UK’s largest grassroots digital rights campaigning organisation, fighting to protect everyone’s rights to privacy and free speech online. We fight for a fair digital ...
Open Rights Group is the UK’s largest grassroots digital rights campaigning organisation, working to protect everyone’s rights to privacy and free speech online. We fight for a fair digital ...
The Data Use and Access Bill will fail to protect the public from harmful uses of artificial intelligence, say digital rights campaigners, Open Rights Group. The Bill, published today, rehashes many ...
The Board of Directors oversees Open Rights Group’s work, which includes staffing, fundraising and responsibility for policy.
We’ve published tips for refugees and migrants to exercise digital rights effectively in the UK. Download a copy of the tips in English, Farsi, Arabic and Ukrainian translations below.
Since joining Open Rights Group in January 2009, Jim has led campaigns against three strikes and the Digital Economy Act, the company Phorm and its plans to snoop on UK users, and against pervasive ...
Members of the Advisory Council (AC) are tech, legal, campaigning and political experts who give ORG advice about a range of issues. The AC is made up of people with differing views that are not ...
ORG Stoke-on-Trent is a place for local supporters concerned about UK digital rights to connect and organise.
In response to our formal complaint to the ICO against Meta’s use of personal data to train Artificial Intelligence models without consent, the ICO has invited Open Rights Group (ORG) to a meeting to ...
Thanks to all of our Corporate Supporters! If you are a business that supports digital rights, you can find out more about becoming an ORG Corporate Supporter here.
Open Rights Group (ORG) works to protect online privacy, challenge mass surveillance and fight for free expression online. We create public pressure through our campaigns, conduct original research, ...
In 2008 BT, Virgin and TalkTalk signed up to a new technology called Phorm, tracking users’ online habits to target them with ads. Thanks to our campaigning, complaints from ORG, and other campaigners ...