All Actions

3 Actions
Action | Take Action
Black background with text that reads in white and neon yellow “Meta: Make Eyewear, not spywear.” Below the text is a graphic collage that includes eyeglasses, a creepy eyeball, and an image of three people walking down the street with neon yellow boxes around them suggesting they have been visually captured and identified.
  • Privacy and Surveillance

TELL META: EYEWEAR, NOT SPYWEAR

Background: Imagine if a stranger walking past you on the sidewalk could know everything about you with one glance: Your name. Your workplace. Your politics. Your health concerns. Even your favorite coffee shop. This would be a massive invasion of privacy – and it's exactly what Meta plans to enable with their internet-connected glasses. Meta intends to add facial recognition technology to their glasses, enabling anyone wearing the product to immediately and invisibly identify strangers. Although specific details aren't yet public, Meta sits on vast databases, including millions of personal profiles on Facebook, Instagram, and Threads, and has long sought to power facial recognition tech with our data. This technology isn't just a breach of privacy. It paves a path for stalking, harassment, and targeted intimidation. The technology is ripe for abuse from everyday people and government actors alike. These glasses are dangerous. They must be stopped. Tell Meta: Your glasses shouldn't know our names. Demand privacy protections today.
Action | Send a Message
Image collage with a dark red background. The Statue of Liberty is in light purple and to the right is a protest sign reading "Immigrants Are Welcome Here"
  • Immigrants' Rights

Tell MA lawmakers to vote YES on the PROTECT Act!

ICE has been terrorizing communities with its lawlessness for too long. Massachusetts should not sit back and give ICE free rein to tear apart our families and neighborhoods!
Action | Send a Message
Road to Opportunity Action.png

Tell Massachusetts Lawmakers: Pass the Road to Opportunity Act

An act to increase opportunoty by ending debt-based driving restrictions