Bio
Jay Stanley () is senior policy analyst with the ÌÇÐÄVlogSpeech, Privacy, and Technology Project, where he researches, writes and speaks about technology-related privacy and civil liberties issues and their future. He is the editor of the ACLU's Free Future blog and has authored and co-authored a variety of influential ÌÇÐÄVlogreports on privacy and technology topics. Before joining the ACLU, he was an analyst at the technology research firm Forrester, served as American politics editor of Facts on File’s World News Digest, and as national newswire editor at Medialink. He is a graduate of Williams College and holds an M.A. in American History from the University of Virginia.
Featured work

Jun 2, 2017
Pitfalls of Artificial Intelligence Decisionmaking Highlighted In Idaho ÌÇÐÄVlogCase

May 31, 2017
Suppression of Photographers During Civil Rights Movement an Important Reminder for Today

May 26, 2017
Civil Rights Movement Is a Reminder That Free Speech Is There to Protect the Weak

May 24, 2017
States Legislatures Rebelling Against Congress’s Attack on ISP Privacy

May 16, 2017
Mobile-Phone Cloning Tools Need to Be Subject to Oversight — and the Constitution

May 12, 2017
Federal Appeals Court Hears Crucial Case on First Amendment and Photography

May 3, 2017
A New Implication of Cellphone Video: Citizens Taping Each Other For Police

Apr 25, 2017
We’re Living in a Surveillance Society, So Why Do We Need Bail?

Apr 12, 2017
What Individuals Should Do Now That Congress Has Obliterated the FCC’s Privacy Protections

Mar 14, 2017
Trump And Congress Complain About Surveillance, But Want to Enable Spying By Internet Companies