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by nceqs3 1088 days ago
While I agree with them, it's important to note that the EFF is very pro-big tech and is largely funded by them.
3 comments

> it's important to note that the EFF is very pro-big tech and is largely funded by them.

I find that a puzzling comment. EFF has a strange way of showing its allegiance to "Big Tech".

What do I not know? How does the EFF demonstrate its allegiance to them?

I took the EFF's work on privacy as an impediment to "Big Tech"'s business model. How am I wrong?

People are so often surprised when the money in an industry funds an industry group. It's especially egregious in the defense industry when people turn it into conspiracy theories saying like "this think tank is a puppet because they got money from the people with money."
exactly. like how else they'll get the money? do you the random people donate?
Obviously a bake sale and all the members of the think tank have to work gig economy jobs in-between research, writing and speeches just to keep the lights on in a dinky little conference room of the sub-sub-sub basement of the Pentagon they rent out.

Perks of the job mainly consist of being able to sporadically say “Gentlemen. You can’t fight in here. This is the War Room!” and having critics in the mainstream media that hate your guts and will—uncompensated!—drop your name on a frequent basis and imply you are much much much more important and influential than you actually are.

EFF always struck me as a more specialized version of the ACLU (for internet and digital privacy). I think they are pro-tech in the sense that tech can empower people and they are sensitive to the ways that the government and various actors attempt to turn that value proposition upside-down and subvert people's rights and quality of life.