As part of its effort to promote the campaign and encourage broad participation, the 'Reset the Net' coalition released this video:
Reset the Net: June 5th, 2014Don't ask for your privacy. Take it back: https://resetthenet.org.
"A year after Snowden's shocking revelations, the NSA is still spying on innocent Americans without a warrant," said CREDO Mobile's president and co-founder Michael Kieschnick in a statement. "CREDO will continue to demand Congress and the president take action to stop unconstitutional mass warrantless surveillance, and until we win real reform, we will encourage users to adopt encryption tools to protect their personal communications from government abuse of the 1st and 4th amendment."
The cornerstone of the campaign calls on web users and site managers to increase cyber-protections by using encryption and other technologies that would curtail government access to otherwise private information. In addition to posting web banners (or splash banners) on June 5, participants are asked to incorporate proven security measures to their online habits or add such features to the sites they manage.
"The NSA is exploiting weak links in Internet security to spy on the entire world," states the coalition on their website, "twisting the Internet we love into something it was never meant to be."
The 'Reset The Net' urges people to "help stop mass surveillance" by building proven security into the everyday Internet and by participating in the online protest on June 5.
"Without needing anyone's permission, we can decide our future--one that's safe, open, and free," the coalition's campaign video promises. "It won't be easy, but if we work hard now, the internet will never be a prison."