Congress is voting to renew FISA Section 702 — the dangerous surveillance law that lets the NSA and FBI search Americans’ calls and texts without a warrant.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain, and TELL THEM: No spying on Americans without a warrant. Period.
freedom.press/reform-section-702
Posts by Trevor Timm
How many public records requests are too many?
According to one New Jersey school district, the answer is just 14 over a single year.
And they’re suing a journalist over it.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social to learn more — and take action: freedom.press/foia
This was seventeen years ago today. Can’t help wondering how different things would be now if rhe architects of the torture program had been held accountable in some way rather than honored and appointed to more presigious posts. www.nytimes.com/2009/04/17/u...
The ICE case against Nashville reporter Estefany Rodríguez is not just wrong — it also has huge implications for free speech.
The Trump admin is suggesting in court that anyone who it deems an “unlawful alien” does not have any First Amendment rights at all.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain.
We at @freedom.press are hiring an audience editor to edit and strategize our outward-facing products, primarily newsletters and videos.
This is a rare opportunity to work with some of the most passionate and dedicated defenders of press freedom.
Come join my team!
Trump, once a vocal critic of FISA Section 702, is now pushing to reauthorize it.
Section 702 allows the government to spy on Americans' communications without a warrant — and it must be reformed.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain and find out how you can help: freedom.press/reform-section-702
What was once a fringe legal theory cooked up by Texas police to muzzle a local reporter is now being mirrored by the Trump administration to chip away at constitutional protections for basic journalistic practices.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain, and subscribe: freedom.press/newsletters
I joined @kgosztola.bsky.social for this conversation exploring how financial access can be a tool to punish journalists who challenge powerful interests. Check it out and subscribe to Kevin's newsletter.
It turns out, when news outlets actually challenge the Trump administration in court, they win.
After @nytimes.com sued the Pentagon over its ridiculous loyalty pledge, a federal judge struck down the restrictions as violating the First Amendment.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain.
Section 702 lets the government spy on Americans’ communications without a warrant.
Now Congress is debating renewing it for several years.
We must not let that happen without major reforms.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain and learn how you can help: freedom.press/reform-section-702
I sure hope the Trump admin does not grab hold of the logic in the Facebook case:
“The @nytimes.com hooks users on addictive games to keep them on the app and then sends them a virtually infinite amount of bad news stories tailored to their interests, leaving them depressed.”
When historians look back on any erosion of First Amendment rights from this era, it will not just be the fault of Trump, but also the news outlets themselves who failed to stand up for their own rights.
Kudos to the @nytimes.com. Sad how many others are cowards. www.nytimes.com/2026/03/20/u...
It turns out, when news outlets aggressively fight back against blatant press freedom restrictions, they will win.
(Attention: every network under the FCC’s jurisdiction.) www.nytimes.com/2026/03/20/b...
The Trump administration has supercharged its abuse of the secrecy system to keep the press and the public in the dark about the Iran war — even as we’re footing the bill to the tune of $1 billion a day.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social explain, and subscribe: freedom.press/newsletters
Trump has supercharged the usual government-lies-us-into-a-new-war by combining abuse of the secrecy system with his crackdown on press freedom.
New video:
This very innocuous video—where we merely cite a court transcript that highlighted a controversial position taken by the Trump DOJ—was flagged by TikTok for "violating community standards."
Trump lawyers have been making frivolous legal arguments they know won't hold up, violating court orders by the dozens, and ignoring basic ethics rules every attorney has to follow.
When are judges going to start using their powers to sanction them?
A federal judge is furious at the DOJ over withholding info on the raid on a Washington Post journalist’s home.
Plus, Florida plans to have its own spy quads to monitor views it doesn't like.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social highlight these stories and more, and subscribe: freedom.press/newsletters
*affect, not effect
ugh, i apologize
To those who stupidly claimed the WikiLeaks prosecution would never effect "real" journalists:
DOJ cited the WikiLeaks case in court as to why they should have been allowed to raid a Washington Post reporter's house without telling the judge about the Privacy Protection Act.
Were you looking for a 90 second summary of the most urgent press freedom stories in the United States this week? I got you covered right here.
Then, subscribe to our newsletter for more: freedom.press/newsletters
Really encourage everyone to read this very meticulous report. It describes the horrific and systematic torture of dozens of Palestinian journalists in Israeli jails.
Kudos to @jodieginsberg.bsky.social and the entire @pressfreedom.bsky.social team. It should be on the front page of every paper.
A must-read report from @pressfreedom.bsky.social: "We returned from hell": Palestinian journalists recount torture in Israeli prisons
"58 Palestinian journalists reported being subjected to what they described as torture, abuse, or other forms of violence in Israeli detention facilities."
Hümeyra Pamuk @humeyra_pamuk SCOOP: The U.S. State Department is developing an online portal that will enable people in Europe and elsewhere to see content banned by their governments, a move Washington views as a way to counter censorship, three sources familiar w/the plan tell me @Simondlewis @G_Slattery
Hümeyra Pamuk @humeyra_pamuk · 17h The site will be hosted at "http://freedom.gov," former DOGE member Edward Coristine, aka “Big Balls”, is also involved in the effort which is being spearheaded by State Department’s top public diplomacy official Sarah Rogers — an outspoken critic of EU content policies. https://freedom.gov/ https://www.reuters.com/world/us-plans-online-portal-bypass-content-bans-europe-elsewhere-2026-02-18/
The administration who literally locked a woman up for nothing other than an oped in a student newspaper criticizing Israel can stfu forever about free speech.
We've been taking a close look at court documents on the FBI's raid on a Washington Post reporter's home. There's a lot journalists can learn from this incident. freedom.press/digisec/blog...
The Trump admin’s effort to deport Rümeysa Öztürk has failed — miserably.
Plus, ICE is claiming that revealing its office locations is a “national security threat.”
Yes, we rolled our eyes too.
Watch @trevortimm.bsky.social spotlight this week's top press freedom news: freedom.press/newsletters
Hegseth's unconstitutional retaliation against Sen. Kelly was so brazen that an exasperated federal judge used more than a dozen exclamation points!
Highlights from the ruling: "Horsefeathers!" and "Please!"
"That is a troubling development in a free country!" buff.ly/YY60KWM
It's important to point out in the sea of horrible news we see all the time: They keep losing! And seemingly at greater frequency every week.