Fighting for Privacy Rights in America
EncryptHer advocates for comprehensive federal privacy legislation and empowers individuals to demand privacy protections from their government.
What We Do
EncryptHer works to protect privacy rights through advocacy, education, and community organizing
Legislative Advocacy
Pushing for comprehensive federal privacy laws
- • Lobbying Congress for privacy legislation
- • Submitting public comments on proposed rules
- • Working with policymakers on privacy bills
- • Monitoring legislative developments
Coalition Building
Partnering with privacy organizations nationwide
- • Collaborating with EFF, ACLU, and EPIC
- • Building grassroots coalitions
- • Coordinating advocacy campaigns
- • Sharing resources and expertise
Community Organizing
Mobilizing citizens for privacy rights
- • Organizing letter-writing campaigns
- • Hosting advocacy training events
- • Coordinating with local activists
- • Building a national privacy movement
Policy Research
Analyzing privacy laws and corporate practices
- • Researching federal and state privacy laws
- • Tracking data breach incidents
- • Studying corporate surveillance practices
- • Publishing policy recommendations
Public Education
Raising awareness about privacy threats
- • Creating educational resources
- • Hosting webinars and workshops
- • Publishing privacy news and analysis
- • Engaging through social media
Direct Action
Providing tools for immediate advocacy
- • Letter templates for representatives
- • Petition campaigns for privacy rights
- • Tools to find your elected officials
- • Guidance on filing privacy complaints
The Privacy Crisis in America
The United States lacks comprehensive federal privacy legislation, leaving Americans vulnerable to corporate surveillance, data breaches, and privacy violations. While the EU has GDPR and other countries have robust privacy protections, the US relies on a patchwork of state laws and narrow federal regulations.
Corporate Surveillance
Tech companies collect massive amounts of personal data with minimal oversight. Your browsing history, location data, private messages, and even biometric information are bought and sold without meaningful consent.
Data Breaches
In 2024 alone, over 1 billion records were exposed in data breaches. Weak privacy laws mean companies face minimal consequences for failing to protect your information.
The GDPR Gap
European citizens have strong privacy rights under GDPR - the right to access, delete, and control their data. Americans have no equivalent federal protections.
Why Federal Legislation Matters
State privacy laws are a start, but only federal legislation can provide consistent protections for all Americans, regulate interstate data flows, and hold tech giants accountable nationwide.
Current Privacy Legislation
Without comprehensive federal privacy law, states are creating their own regulations - resulting in a confusing patchwork that leaves most Americans unprotected.
Federal Level
Current Federal Privacy Laws
- • HIPAA - Healthcare data only (1996)
- • COPPA - Children under 13 only (1998)
- • FCRA - Credit reporting only (1970)
- • GLBA - Financial institutions only (1999)
These laws are decades old and cover only specific sectors - most personal data remains unprotected.
Proposed Federal Bills
- • American Data Privacy and Protection Act (ADPPA) - Comprehensive privacy framework (stalled in Congress)
- • Data Accountability and Transparency Act - FTC enforcement powers
- • Kids Online Safety Act (KOSA) - Protections for minors
Despite bipartisan support, privacy bills continue to stall due to tech industry lobbying.
State Privacy Laws
California - CCPA/CPRA (Strongest Protection)
Enacted: CCPA (2020), CPRA (2023)
Coverage: California residents
Key Rights: Access, deletion, opt-out of sale, correction, and limitations on sensitive data use
Enforcement: California Privacy Protection Agency with strong enforcement powers
Virginia - CDPA
Enacted: 2023
Coverage: Virginia residents
Key Rights: Access, deletion, data portability, opt-out of targeted advertising
Limitations: Attorney General enforcement only, no private right of action
Other States
Several other states have enacted or are considering privacy laws including Colorado, Connecticut, Utah, Oregon, Texas, Montana, Iowa, Tennessee, Florida, and Indiana.
The patchwork approach creates confusion and leaves most Americans without comprehensive protections.
How You Can Take Action
Your voice matters. Here are concrete steps you can take to advocate for privacy rights.
Contact Your Representatives
Find your elected officials and let them know privacy matters to you.
Find Your RepresentativesJoin Active Campaigns
Participate in ongoing advocacy efforts and letter-writing campaigns.
Sign Petitions
Add your voice to petitions demanding privacy protections.
Spread Awareness
Share information about privacy issues on social media and in your community.
Privacy Organizations & Resources
Connect with leading organizations fighting for digital privacy rights.
Leading nonprofit defending digital privacy, free speech, and innovation. Provides legal support, policy analysis, and advocacy tools.
Protects privacy rights through litigation, advocacy, and public education. Fights government and corporate surveillance.
Join the Fight for Privacy Rights
Together, we can demand comprehensive federal privacy legislation and hold corporations accountable. Every voice matters in this fight.