Skip to main content
Logo Fundacji Panoptykon
Szukaj

DonateDonate

Główna nawigacja EN

  • What we do
    • What we are fighting for
    • The problems we address
    • Our work
    • Achievements
    • How we respect your privacy
  • About us
    • What is Panoptykon
    • Our team
    • Management
    • Funding
    • Cooperations
    • Join us
  • Publications
    • Articles
    • Guides
    • Reports
    • All publications
    Image Photo of participants in the EP Hearing
    Article DSA vs. Reality: Are children safer online?
    Image Zdjęcie przedstawiające książkę z okładką: Europe Digital Services Act
    Article DSA implementation in Poland – timeline
  • Donate
    • Success
    • Donation failed

Języki EN

  • PL
  • Donate
  • What is Panoptykon
  • Cooperations

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Articles
Article

Secret services escape citizens’ control

Poland celebrated its 25 years of democracy recently. In those two and a half decades, among other changes, most public institutions in Poland have got more or less used to citizens' control. It has taken years of advocacy and watchdog activity, as well as a number of court cases to decide whether a given piece of information is actually “public”. But this investment is now paying off: today even some of the most secret of all secret services answer freedom of information requests concerning their work. There is, however, a stain in the image: one agency – Military Counterintelligence Service (SKW) – that keeps refusing to disclose any kind of information about its activity. Their approach is a reminder of much deeper and systemic problem faced by Polish authorities: the uncontrolled and uncoordinated secret services.

02.07.2014 Text
Article

Life under surveillance

Panoptykon presents four short animated movies about family life "under surveillance". Series intend is to show how surveillance affects all of us: how use of modern tools such us cameras, ID cards, databases, scripts, and ad tracking tools - control all spheres of our lives.

14.06.2014 Text
Article

Why should you know who has been asking about you?, re:publica 2014 [VIDEO]

In the post-Snowden world we became well aware that data we store on servers belonging to private companies tends to have a second life. It is where secret services and law enforcement meet the Internet. How to prevent bulk transfers from private to public data bases? How to make sure that due process is in place? What do we know about disclosures of our data and how can we learn more? Katarzyna Szymielewicz explains, what we should know about state authorities access to citizens data and why. She also presents the results of Panoptykon Foundation’s research on public authorities’ access to the data of Internet services users.

05.06.2014 Text
Article

Polish NGO to Obama: Mass Surveillance Is Not Freedom

On June 4, 2014, one day before the anniversary of the Snowden revelations, Poland celebrates 25 years since the fall of an authoritarian regime. On this occasion, President Obama is visiting Poland and meeting with many heads of states—including officials who were affected by the mass surveillance scandal carried out by the NSA. Since October 2013, the Panoptykon Foundation, a Polish NGO, has tried to understand the relationship between the Polish and United States’ secret service organizations. Panoptykon believes that the Polish government, by accepting mass and pre-emptive surveillance, is reverting back to the much contested practices of the former, authoritarian regime — practices that triggered the revolution 25 years ago. Thus, the NGO has organized a user-generated campaign for June 4, urging people to welcome President Obama to Poland by vocalizing their thoughts on mass surveillance.

03.06.2014 Text
Article

Do Something About Your Digital Shadow, TEDx 2014 [VIDEO]

Privacy is not about hiding things that we want to keep secret. It is about our right to choose, when, for what purpose and who can see certain data about us. It’s about control. Even data that might seem meaningless, like separate internet application logs or IP address that changes apparently with every new session, but put together they might reveal a lot about Internet user with surprising accuracy. We might lose track of what we have put online, but Internet doesn’t forget. It may even guess things that you never told anybody. Unfortunately usage of digital shadow, especially for profiling purposes, is not regulated by law. What can you do to reduce your digital shadow or stop others form using it against you?

29.05.2014 Text

Pagination

  • Previous page Previous Previous page Previous
  • 19 out of 23
  • Next page Next Next page Next

Join the fight for freedom and privacy

Support our work

Donate

logoPL

Menu (stopka) EN

Exclusives
  • Vlop!
  • SIN vs Facebook
  • Dealing with Disinformation
  • Who (really) targets you?

Exclusives

  • Vlop!
  • SIN vs Facebook
  • Dealing with Disinformation
  • Who (really) targets you?
Archive
  • Positions
  • Freedom of information motions (Polish)

Archive

  • Positions
  • Freedom of information motions (Polish)
Regulations
  • Statutes
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of use
  • Before you donate

Regulations

  • Statutes
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms of use
  • Before you donate
Contact & Support
  • Donate
  • Donate 1.5% of tax
  • Media
  • Contact us

Contact & Support

  • Donate
  • Donate 1.5% of tax
  • Media
  • Contact us

RSS Mastodon Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Wykop You Tube Instagram

CC BY-SA (except where otherwise noted) ∙  [pictograms]

Designed by: Dariusz Palarczyk   Coded by: Caltha | Ratioweb