Digital Citizens Alliance

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The Digital Citizens Alliance is a United States non-profit organization focused on Internet safety issues.[1] It has criticized Google for not systematically removing videos from YouTube that are used to perpetrate fraud or provide instructions for buying drugs.[2][3] The group has released reports focused on how consumers are exposed to malware by visiting content theft sites. In 2014 a debate was prompted by leaked Sony emails about whether the organization inappropriately influenced politician Mike Moore by hiring Jim Hood, who simultaneously served the politician on a pro-bono basis. In April 2016, the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals dismissed legal challenges to Hood's investigation.

Reports and Filings

In 2013, Digital Citizens Alliance did an expose on online pharmacies selling drugs to minors.[4][5] This was followed by a report on online drug marketplaces like Silk Road in 2014.[6] DCA have issued several reports alleging that Google inappropriately profited from advertising revenues on YouTube videos that promote the sale of unlawful sale of controlled substance.[7]

Digital Citizens has conducted reports on whether ad-supported websites were infringing copyrights of movies and television shows.[8] In one report, with MediaLink, Digital Citizens estimated that ad-supported content theft was at least a $227 million business.[9]

In another report, Digital Citizens advocated that credit card companies were offering stolen content for a subscription fee.[10] In September 2014, they commissioned a report via the brand protection organization NetNames reporting how various cyberlocker sites 'make millions' in profit.[11] The CEO of cloud storage service Mega said the allegations were 'grossly untrue and highly defamatory'[12] and 4shared said the report was 'defamatory'.[13]

In a December 2015 report entitled Digital Bait, Digital Citizens showed how 1 in 3 visitors to content theft websites exposed themselves to malware that can lead to identity theft and financial loss. They also have provided ongoing coverage of the state of darknet markets.[14]

In April 2016, Digital Citizens submitted comments with the FCC warning that a proposed set top box plan could "make it easier for hackers and malware purveyors to trick consumers into turning over sensitive financial and personal information. Piracy is often a doorway to harmful malware that can lead to identity theft, financial loss, and computers being taken over by hackers." The filing also raised concerns that the proposal "will likely upset consumers’ settled expectations about which of their family’s media consumption habits are private and which are public. To take just one example, the FCC’s proposals would likely allow set-top box vendors to use consumer Internet searches and browsing histories to inform the types of advertising that appears during television shows. Imagine, for instance, if a married couple started to receive television advertisements for divorce attorneys or online dating websites based on one of the spouse’s Internet browsing histories. Or if a child was exposed to television advertisements about divorce, terminal illness, or other sensitive topics that one of her parents may have recently researched."

Advocacy issues

In 2014 in response to leaked Sony emails, former attorney general Peggy Lautenschlager said the DCA had inappropriately influenced politician Jim Hood. The organization hired lobbyist Mike Moore, who also served Hood as a consultant on a pro-bono basis. The article alleged he used his relationship as a pro-bono consultant to serve the agenda of private industry, such as Microsoft and the movie industry. Jim Hood and the Mike Moore said they are motivated by Google's conduct as opposed to private industry.[15] In June 2015 Google subpoenaed DCA and related lobbying organizations who had worked with Hood for documents about its relationship with Jim Hood.[16]

References

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External links