Write a list of things you would never do. Because it is possible that in the next year, you will do them. —Sarah Kendzior [1]
We, the undersigned,
are employees of tech organizations and companies based in the United States.
We are engineers, designers, business executives, and others
whose jobs include managing or processing data about people.
We are choosing to stand in solidarity with Muslim Americans,
immigrants, and all people whose lives and livelihoods
are threatened by the incoming administration’s
proposed data collection policies.
We refuse to build a database of people
based on their Constitutionally-protected religious beliefs.
We refuse to facilitate mass deportations
of people the government believes to be undesirable.
We have educated ourselves on the history of threats like these,
and on the roles that technology and technologists played
in carrying them out.
We see how IBM collaborated to digitize and streamline the Holocaust,
contributing to the deaths of six million Jews and millions of others.
We recall the internment of Japanese Americans
during the Second World War.
We recognize that mass deportations
precipitated the very atrocity the word genocide
was created to describe:
the murder of 1.5 million Armenians in Turkey.
We acknowledge that
genocides are not merely a relic of the distant past—among others,
Tutsi Rwandans and
Bosnian Muslims
have been victims in our lifetimes.
Today we stand together to say: not on our watch, and never again.
We commit to the following actions:
- We refuse to participate in the creation of
databases of identifying information
for the United States government
to target individuals based on race, religion, or national origin.
- We will advocate within our organizations:
- to minimize the collection and retention of data
that would facilitate ethnic or religious targeting.
- to scale back existing datasets
with unnecessary racial, ethnic, and national origin data.
- to responsibly destroy high-risk datasets and backups.
- to implement security and privacy best practices,
in particular,
for end-to-end encryption to be the default wherever possible.
- to demand appropriate legal process
should the government request that we turn over
user data collected by our organization, even in small amounts.
- If we discover misuse of data that we consider illegal or unethical
in our organizations:
- We will work with our colleagues and leaders to correct it.
- If we cannot stop these practices,
we will exercise our rights and responsibilities to speak out publicly
and engage in responsible whistleblowing
without endangering users.
- If we have the authority to do so,
we will use all available legal defenses to stop these practices.
- If we do not have such authority,
and our organizations force us to engage in such misuse,
we will resign from our positions rather than comply.
- We will raise awareness and ask critical questions
about the responsible and fair use of data and algorithms
beyond our organization and our industry.
Note: Signatories’ references to affiliated organizations below
are for identification purposes
and are not intended to imply an endorsement by the organization.
Signed,
- Akil Harris, First Look Media
- Alex Cook, Software Engineer ( Part-time Thought Leader)
- Andreas Fuchs, Stripe
- Andrew Bonventre, Google
- Annie Tuan, Mobile Software Engineer
- Asher Cohen
- Ben Cohen
- Ben Wood, Autodesk
- Brady O'Connell
- Brian Geppert, metacode
- Brian Mastenbrook, AirStash
- Brian T. Rice, Awake Networks
- Britton Watkins
- Dan Bornstein, Computer Programmer
- Dan Kaminsky, Chief Scientist, White Ops
- Dave Mayo, Software Developer, Harvard University
- David Beckley
- David Hartunian, Position Development
- David Reid, Engineer, Fig
- Donald Ball, SparkFund
- Drew Durbin, CEO, Wave
- Drew Erny
- Ed Ropple, edboxes
- Elsie Powell, 2U
- Erin Ptacek, Latacora
- Ethan Schlenker, Twitter
- Heather Rivers, Director of Engineering, Mode Analytics
- Holly Allen
- Janardan Yri
- Jane Ruffino
- Jeffrey Stanton, SparkFund
- Jen-Mei Wu, Liberating Ourselves Locally
- Jenny Tong, Pumping Station: One
- Jeremy Rauch, Latacora
- Jesse Luehrs
- Jonathan Haddad, The Last Pickle
- Josh Feldman
- Joshua Wise, Imaging Architect, NVIDIA Corporation
- Judy Tuan, Software Engineering Manager
- Justin Falcone
- Ka-Ping Yee, Engineer, Wave
- Karl Fogel, Partner, Open Tech Strategies LLC
- Katerina Marchán, npm, Inc.
- Kelly Buchanan
- Kelly Shortridge
- Kelsey Gilmore-Innis, Callisto
- Leigh Honeywell, Slack
- Lincoln Quirk, Founder, Wave.com
- lvh, Latacora
- Maggie Ronan
- Mano Marks, Docker
- Marlena Compton, IBM
- Matthew Garrett, CoreOS
- Matthew McVickar
- Matthew Pfeffer
- Melinda Jacobs
- Melissa Elliott
- Michael Downey
- Michael Jeremiah Curry
- Michael Wilber, Cornell Tech
- Mike Perry, Tor Project
- Mikeal Rogers, Node.js Foundation
- Mindy Preston, Docker
- Nate Parsons, Planet Labs, Inc.
- Nathan Sorenson, SparkFund
- Nick Sullivan, Cloudflare
- Nikko Patten-Weinstein, SparkFund
- Noah Hall
- Paul Kruczynski
- Peter Eckersley, Chief Computer Scientist, Electronic Frontier Foundation
- Peter Reilly, Software Engineer
- Philip James, Stripe
- Richard Esteban Martinez Hughes, MIT Class of 2008
- Richo Healey, Stripe
- Ryan Sablosky, Bard College
- Seth Price, RS & GS Engineer, Planet, Inc.
- Shaun Carland, Software Engineer, Yesware
- Shauna Gordon-McKeon
- Sheila Miguez, Canonical
- Siena Aguayo, Software Engineer, Indiegogo
- Stephen Woods, Salesforce
- Steven Johnson, Google
- Ted Scharff, Planet Labs
- Teresa Murphy, Marketing Associate, Indiegogo
- Thomas H. Ptacek, Latacora
- Tim Chevalier, Google
- Timothy Kempf, Meadow
- Tymm Zerr
- Valerie Aurora, Frame Shift Consulting
- William Wnekowicz, Developer in Residence, KPCB
- Yan Zhu, Security Engineer
How to sign this pledge
If you would like to join us in signing this pledge,
we ask that you send us your name and
optional position, affiliation, and/or URL,
exactly as you would like to be listed here,
in one of the following ways:
Additional resources
If you’re reading this and want to take action beyond signing,
some things you can do include:
Donate
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Legal assistance and referrals
Other resources
Further reading
Footnotes