Post-Tribune

Privacy threatened in post-Roe world

- By Parmy Olson

About 10 years ago, a story about Target Corp.’s uncanny ability to detect a customer’s pregnancy made waves. An angry man had gone into a Target store in Minneapoli­s, demanding to speak to a manager and flashing coupons his teenage daughter had received in the mail for baby clothes and cribs. “Are you trying to encourage her to get pregnant?” he asked.

It turned out his daughter was pregnant, and Target had figured this out before he had.

Data mining by companies has only improved since then, but fortunatel­y so have our tools for protecting privacy. A leaked draft ruling reported by Politico suggests the U.S. Supreme Court is in favor of overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 decision that gave women the right to abortion. This would make online privacy more critical than ever for women and health care providers, as secrecy around abortion would become integral not just for personal reasons but to avoid potential legal ramificati­ons or blowback from vigilantes.

It’s unclear who would be legally liable for an abortion in close to a dozen or more U.S. states that would like to ban it. But many women will want to hide their online activity out of caution. Democratic Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon warned on Tuesday that “every digital record — from web searches, to phone records and app data — will be weaponized in Republican states as a way to control women’s bodies.”

One of the first things many women do when they find themselves needing an abortion is seek advice online. That won’t change no matter what the Supreme Court rules.

But if they happen to live in one of 22 states that would probably outlaw abortion in the absence of Roe v. Wade, they’d be wise to hide their browsing history and use encrypted messaging apps like WhatsApp and Signal to talk to others about their plans. Should abortion pills also be outlawed, women may turn to the dark web to procure them — something they already do, according to a study from the University of Texas.

Women may also turn to VPNs to stop mobile network providers and search engines from seeing their browsing habits. They’ll clear their web histories, use incognito windows or download more privacy-focused browsers like Firefox.

Such tools, normally associated with political dissidents in autocratic regimes, could become far more important for American women in a post-Roe v. Wade world. Tech news site Motherboar­d reported on Monday that a location-data firm has already been selling informatio­n related to people’s visits to abortion clinics, including where visitors had come from and how long they stayed, by tracking apps on groups of phones.

The internet presents risk, but also help, such as telemedici­ne services that offer abortion medication. Many women in the U.S. have flocked to services like Aid Access to acquire such medication; the website “Women on Web” offers services to women around the world. Depending on the location, pills can cost approximat­ely $90, versus $600 or more to get the procedure done in a clinic, prohibitiv­ely expensive for many of the women who need abortions (most of whom live on or below the poverty line).

Online collective­s like the “Auntie Networks” of Facebook will also become increasing­ly important. These are pages run by people offering a spare room in U.S. states where abortion is legal, for women who need the procedure. A 2019 report in The Washington Post described how some Auntie Network pages suggested taking selfies at local landmarks as “proof ” that the trip was just a vacation.

One host in Iowa said they’d be “happy to mail you a birthday card,” which contained birth control, a Plan B pill or a pregnancy test.

Well-meaning as these initiative­s are, this is sensitive informatio­n being hosted by a social media company that’s already being used by third parties, in this case advertiser­s.

In the meantime, a forthcomin­g law in the European Union that reins in the power of large technology companies may have the unintended consequenc­e of making people’s data in the U.S. more vulnerable to surveillan­ce.

The EU’s Digital Markets Act, which will come into effect in the next few years, forces the world’s biggest digital companies to make their products compatible with those of competitor­s. That means messaging apps like WhatsApp will need to coexist with less secure services like SMS. But some cryptograp­hy experts say that making these tools interopera­ble will break their encryption standards, which could put women seeking an abortion at greater risk.

Social media and search platforms have for years been exploited by the surveillan­ce advertisin­g industry. How much will they resist future government efforts to enforce abortion bans? What happens if state prosecutor­s order Facebook or Google to identify women who are breaking the rules?

Given the libertaria­n ethos of many Silicon Valley billionair­e founders and the legal fallout from whistleblo­wer Edward Snowden, it’s hard to see such firms giving in to government demands to break their encryption and hand over such details. But put enough financial pressure on a business and anything can happen.

For now, encryption and online privacy tools are a sacred right for women seeking an abortion. They mustn’t turn into a luxury.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/AP ?? Later this year, the U.S. Supreme Court may overturn the 1973 decision that legalized abortion nationwide. Above, a person holds a sign on Wednesday in Washington, D.C.
ALEX BRANDON/AP Later this year, the U.S. Supreme Court may overturn the 1973 decision that legalized abortion nationwide. Above, a person holds a sign on Wednesday in Washington, D.C.

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