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Security Education Companion
A free resource for digital security educators

Welcome to the Security Education Companion! SEC is a resource for people teaching digital security to their friends and neighbors.

If you are new to digital security, want tutorials for privacy-protecting tools, or want translated guides in 11 languages, head to Surveillance Self-Defense (SSD).

Lessons

Putting together a lesson plan for a digital security workshop? Check out our beginner-friendly lesson modules.

Locking Down Social Media

Duration: 1 hour
Beginning

Passwords

Duration: 30 minutes - 1 hour
BeginningIntermediate

How to Install Signal

Duration: 1 hour and 30 minutes - 2 hours
BeginningIntermediate

Security News

Want to stay up-to-date with security news? Check out our curated posts from EFF's Deeplinks blog.

Who Defends Your Data? Report Reveals Peruvian ISPs Progress on User Privacy, Still Room for Improvement

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Hiperderecho, the leading digital rights organization in Peru, in collaboration with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, today launched its second ¿Quien Defiende Tus Datos? (Who Defends Your Data?), an evaluation of the privacy practices of the Internet Service Providers (ISPs) that millions of Peruvians use every day.  This year's results are more encouraging than those in 2015's report, with Telefonica's Movistar making significant improvement in its privacy policy,...

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Here’s Why You Can’t Trust What Cops and Companies Claim About Automated License Plate Readers

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Emails Prove ICE Could Access Data from Orange County Shopping Malls, Despite the Companies' Denials

In response to an ACLU report on how law enforcement agencies share information collected by automated license plate readers (ALPRs) with Immigration and Customs Enforcement, officials have been quick to deny and obfuscate despite documentary evidence obtained directly from ICE itself through a Freedom of Information Act lawsuit

Let’s be clear: you can’t trust what ALPR...

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Facebook Doubles Down On Misusing Your Phone Number

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When we publicly demanded that Facebook stop messing with users’ phone numbers last week, we weren’t expecting the social network to double down quite like this: By default, anyone can use the phone number that a user provides for two-factor authentication (2FA) to find that user’s profile. For people who need 2FA to protect their account and stay safe, Facebook is forcing them into unnecessarily choosing between security and privacy.

While settings are available to choose...

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