One Small Step for Privacy, One Giant Leap Against Surveillance
▻http://www.globalpolicy.org/component/content/article/161-politics/52564-one-small-step-for-privacy-one-giant-leap-against-surveillance.h
On December 18, 2013 the 193 members of the United Nations General Assembly unanimously approved a UN privacy resolution entitled “The right to privacy in the digital age.”
The resolution, which was introduced by Brazil and Germany and sponsored by more than 50 member states, is aimed at upholding the right to privacy for everyone at a time when the United States and the United Kingdom have been conducting sweeping mass surveillance on billions of innocent individuals around the world from domestic soil.
January 7, 2014 | Electronic Frontier Foundation
One Small Step for Privacy, One Giant Leap Against Surveillance
The resolution reaffirms a core principle of international human rights law: Individuals should not be denied human rights simply because they live in another country from the one that is surveilling them. Signees hope the resolution will make it harder for the US and its Five Eyes allies to justify their mass surveillance activities by claiming that their human rights obligations stop at their own borders.