Privacy Articles

Privacy tactics and technologies used.

Carbon paper typewriter pages symbolizing underground resistance publishing
The Samizdat Spirit - How We Fought Back Then, and Why We Must Now
The Soviet Union offers both a textbook example of how surveillance destroys a society and a powerful blueprint for resistance. From underground typewriters to Lithuania's human shields, the fight for free speech has always been the fight for civilization itself.
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Symbolic imagery of digital walls and underground resistance
The Architecture of Control - From Soviet Samizdat to China's Great Firewall
What the KGB tried to do with informants, checkpoints, and carbon paper, modern authoritarian states have automated with algorithms and real-name registration. Lithuania's resistance shows why protecting free speech is the only thing standing between free societies and digital authoritarianism.
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Soviet-era surveillance imagery juxtaposed with modern digital monitoring
The Analog Panopticon - What the Soviet Union Teaches Us About Digital Surveillance
The Soviet Union built a totalitarian surveillance state with informants, censorship boards, and internal passports. Today's digital infrastructure can achieve the same level of control—automated and at terrifying scale.
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Digital art piece of a modern Trojan Horse
The Trojan Horse of "Child Safety" - How Age Verification Laws Threaten Digital Privacy
Governments globally are using child protection as a pretext to push through sweeping age verification laws that build mass surveillance infrastructure and threaten digital anonymity, free speech, and civil liberties.
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