https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/WO2205/S00313/human-rights-leaders-at-davos-spyware-is-a-weapon.htm
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Human Rights Leaders At Davos: Spyware Is A Weapon |
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Date and time: Wednesday 25 May, 2022, 10:15 - 10:45 CET
Location: Under the world flags at the entrance to the WEF Conference Centre (TBD)
This press conference brings together some of the world’s leading civil society organizations assembled at the World Economic Forum in Davos. We stand together to red flag how the spyware industry has become an urgent threat to human rights and security, and the risks if world leaders don’t take a stand against the current state of surveillance technology and its government purchasers.
Surveillance technology is being weaponized to commit gross human rights violations across the globe. Scaling up their operations in the dark, developers make their fortunes supplying this dangerous tech to governments seeking to intimidate and silence dissenting voices, undermine trust in digital systems, and expand their arsenal for digital repression.
Panelists:
Panelists will explore actions that world leaders can take to show responsible leadership amidst this proliferation of spyware technology, including:
We, as human rights defenders, are calling on decision makers gathered at Davos to take action that protects everyone — from world leaders to the world’s most marginalized.
We call on all stakeholders to join us in publicly condemning the state of this dangerous trade, and initiating a moratorium limiting the sale, transfer, and use of abusive spyware until people’s rights are safeguarded under international human rights law.
Under mounting global pressure, the acceptance of this trade is faltering:
States hold the primary power — and the duty — to force an end to this trade and use of abusive tech. Leaders must bring their sanctions regimes, export controls, and surveillance oversight into the digital age, targeting first the spyware industry that erodes human rights. Companies have a responsibility to ensure that this pernicious industry comes to an end, and civil society organizations will continue to raise their voices and demand justice for the most vulnerable.
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