Tech Policy Press - Technology and Democracy
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Tech Policy Press - Technology and Democracy
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Tech Policy Press is a nonprofit media and community venture intended to provoke new ideas, debate and discussion at the intersection of technology and […]

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AI, Surveillance and the Siege of Minneapolis
<p>"Operation Metro Surge" — the massive immigration enforcement operation playing out right now in Minnesota — was billed as a targeted effort to apprehend undocumented immigrants. But what it has exposed goes far beyond immigration enforcement. It has pulled back the curtain on a sprawling surveillance apparatus that incorporates artificial intelligence, facial recognition, and other novel tools — not just to enable the raids that have turned violent and, in some cases, deadly; but also to silence dissent, to intimidate entire communities, and to discourage people from even watching what masked federal agents are doing in their own neighborhoods.</p><p>To discuss these events and the prospects for reform, <strong>Justin Hendrix </strong>spoke to <strong>Irna Landrum</strong>, a senior campaigner at Kairos Fellowship and author of a recent piece on Tech Policy Press, "<a href="https://www.techpolicy.press/how-ice-uses-ai-to-automate-authoritarianism/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">How ICE Uses AI to Automate Authoritarianism</a>," and <strong>Alejandra Montoya-Boyer</strong>, vice president for the Center for Civil Rights and Technology at the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights, which has <a href="https://civilrights.org/resource/dhs-funding-reform/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">called for reforms</a> at the Department of Homeland Security and its component agencies.</p>
techpolicy.press
February 6, 2026 at 4:28 AM
What to Expect from US States on Child Online Safety in 2026
2026 is poised to be another landmark year for the child online safety debate in the United States. In recent years, states have passed dozens of bills aimed at expanding protections for kids as they navigate risks on social media platforms, AI chatbots and other pools, with more likely on the way. Lawmakers in Washington, meanwhile, are considering a flurry of proposals that could set a national standard on the issue. But many of these efforts are facing legal limbo as industry and some digital rights groups allege they violate constitutional rights and trample on privacy. Tech Policy Press senior editor **Cristiano Lima-Strong** spoke to three experts tracking the issue to assess the current policy landscape in the United States and how it may shift in 2026, particularly as state legislators continue to take up the cause: * **Amina Fazlullah**  is head of tech policy advocacy at Common Sense Media, a group that advocates for child online safety measures. She previously served as a tech policy fellow for Mozilla and as director of policy at the Benton Foundation. * **Joel Thayer**  is president of the Digital Progress Institute, a think tank that advocates for age verification policies. He previously clerked for Federal Trade Commission official Maureen Ohlhausen and served as policy counsel for the tech trade group The App Association. * **Kate Ruane**  is the director of the Free Expression Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, a nonprofit that advocates for digital rights. She previously served as lead public policy specialist for the Wikimedia Foundation and as senior legislative counsel for the ACLU.
techpolicy.press
January 12, 2026 at 4:22 AM