Privacy tools…
https://pogowasright.org/resource-privacy-law-directory-codamail/
Resource: Privacy Law Directory — Codamail
Regular readers may recall that this site recently noted The Data Broker Directory: Who has your data, where they got it, and who they sell it to by Codamail’s Stephen K. Gielda of Packetderm.
Instead of taking a well-deserved break after all the work he did to compile that resource, Steve went down the rabbit hole and compiled yet more helpful information. Codamail has now released a Privacy Law Directory. From its explanation:
This directory covers 21 country jurisdictions across the United States, the European Union, and international partners as of February 2026. Each page examines not just data protection legislation but also surveillance laws, intelligence agencies, data broker contracts, Internet exchange point taps, sureveillance company contracts, mutual legal assistance treaties (MLATs), data sharing agreements, data retention laws, encryption laws, child protection laws, oversight boards, and enforcement actions, because understanding privacy requires understanding the full picture.
The directory is organized around the intelligence alliance framework that shapes modern signals intelligence cooperation: the Five Eyes (the core anglophone alliance), the Nine Eyes (adding four European partners), and the Fourteen Eyes (SIGINT Seniors Europe). These alliances determine how intercepted communications and personal data flow between governments, making them directly relevant to any assessment of a jurisdiction’s privacy posture.
A recurring finding across every jurisdiction in this directory is that privacy laws primarily protect a country’s own citizens and residents. Nearly every nation examined here maintains legal exemptions that permit its intelligence agencies to collect, intercept, and retain foreign communications with fewer restrictions than apply to domestic targets. These foreign traffic exemptions, combined with intelligence-sharing alliances that allow partner nations to collect on each other’s populations and share the results back, create a global system in which domestic privacy protections can be structurally bypassed.
Beyond government surveillance, commercial data collection operates largely outside the scope of these laws. Data brokers aggregate personal information from public records, commercial transactions, app SDKs, advertising exchanges, and social media into profiles that can be purchased by governments, private investigators, and corporations without the judicial oversight required for law enforcement surveillance. Internet exchange points are monitored in multiple choke points (places most traffic passes through). Commercial surveillance contractors sell endpoint exploitation tools, spyware, and analytics platforms directly to government agencies. The result is that the privacy protections documented in this directory, while significant, represent only one layer of a more complex reality.
For detailed coverage of these mechanisms, see the Data Broker Directory (over 1700 across 17 categories) and The Myth of Jurisdictional Privacy.
Go explore and bookmark the Privacy Law Directory now.
With great thanks to Steve and Codamail for taking our privacy so seriously.
The Lone Ranger will be unmasked?
https://pogowasright.org/federal-judge-masked-ice-agents-violate-fourth-amendment/
Federal judge: Masked ICE agents violate Fourth Amendment
Chris Dickerson reports:
A federal judge has ruled Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s practice of conducting arrests with masked, unidentifiable agents violates the Fourth Amendment’s prohibition on unreasonable seizures.
In a February 19 opinion, U.S. District Judge Joseph E. Goodwin ordered the immediate release of petitioner Anderson Jesus Urquilla-Ramos, who was “arrested abruptly and without warning by a group of masked men purporting to be” ICE officers.
“Antiseptic judicial rhetoric cannot do justice to what is happening,” Goodwin wrote to begin his 34-page ruling. “Across the interior of the United States, agents of the federal government — masked, anonymous, armed with military weapons, operating from unmarked vehicles, acting without warrants of any kind — are seizing persons for civil immigration violations and imprisoning them without any semblance of due process.
Read more at Legal Newsline.
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