Sarah Forland
Policy Analyst, Open Technology Institute, 麻豆果冻传媒
On April 17, Mijente and Media Justice hosted activists, advocates, academics, artists, and tech workers from across the country in Atlanta, Georgia, at to organize against the misuse of technology. The Open Technology Institute, the , and co-hosted a capacity building workshop, 鈥From Passwords to Policies: A Hands-On Digital Safety Workshop for Advocacy Orgs,鈥 for grassroot organizations who want to improve their digital safety and privacy practices.
Community organizers and activists face an ever-growing regime of data extraction from our devices, web activity, and app use. This data can be misused, exposed, and weaponized. For those working on the ground to advocate for communities and individuals that are marginalized, mitigating existing digital threats can help protect activists and organizers as well as the communities they serve.
We presented our co-created , workshopped a privacy and security self-assessment with advocacy organizations, and shared best practices and realistic countermeasures based on Amplify Georgia鈥檚 actions as a reproductive justice collaborative of nine organizations.
Amplify Georgia shared how they are integrating digital safety into organizational practices. Their work is informed by their , a community-led campaign advocating for anti-surveillance laws in local counties and cities across Georgia. Amplify highlighted how the threat of digital surveillance is very real in the state. Currently, Atlanta sits as the 鈥 having an estimated . It is also where Flock is headquartered; Flock is an automated license plate reader company that鈥檚 used by law enforcement for and misused to search for a person believed to have . In December 2025, a woman in Georgia was after she was hospitalized due to complications from using misoprostol to self-administer an abortion. If prosecuted, it could set a larger precedent for how the state will criminalize people seeking reproductive healthcare after Georgia鈥檚 2019 strict ban on abortions post six weeks.
Under this hostile landscape, Amplify Georgia shared how they鈥檝e navigated limited resources and capacity to protect the organization鈥檚 data and staff as well as the community members it serves. Alongside other advocacy organizations at the event, Amplify discussed traversing associated tradeoffs and challenges of implementing digital safety practices across a team鈥檚 work.
Over the course of the conference, we handed out over 50 zines and spoke with countless organizers working to make their communities safer and more equitable.
During our workshop, to help activists and organizations assess their own capacity and needs, we shared a checklist that reflects OTI鈥檚 work with the organizations in the NIRH-led Abortion Data Lab to ensure a grounded approach to improving digital safety.
We also shared with workshop attendees the best privacy practices we identified with the lab participants’ input and discussed real-world examples of why protecting data is important:
Our workshop also walked participants through creating their own zine. Activist artist and NIRH鈥檚 Multi-Media Content Creator Sanna Legan spoke about the power of art as a collective organizing tool, explaining the art of zine-making through three simple steps: make a clear statement, explain how it impacts audiences with three key takeaways, and use a call to action to mobilize readers. By combining visually appealing graphics with short, easily digestible text, zines are designed to be accessible and easily shareable by a wide range of audiences.