What We Do
TechFreedom digs deep into the hard policy and legal questions raised by technological change. We’re bullish on the future: for the most part, it’ll be great — if we let it. If those in power can resist the all-too-natural impulse for stability and control. We craft policy frameworks that allow for experimentation, innovation, and evolution, that help people adapt to change, instead of trying to fight it, that focus on clear problems. In short, we teach policymakers how to be friends, not enemies, of the future.
The future will be as grand, and as particular, as we are.
Recent Posts
Upcoming Event: The Culture War, FTC Investigations & the First Amendment
Before he was appointed Federal Trade Commission Chair, Andrew Ferguson promised he would “Fight Wokeness.” He said he would “Hold Big Tech Accountable and Stop...
For Innovative Space Activities, Mission Authorization Is the Right Model, but Congress Must Act
Today, TechFreedom submitted comments to the Department of Commerce’s Office of Commercial Space (OSC) on its framework to establish a “Mission Authorization” regulatory regime for...
FTC’s AI Policy Statement No Substitute for Rulemaking
Today, TechFreedom released an open letter calling on the FTC to take public comments before finalizing its policy statement on deceptive AI and federal preemption....
FCC Cannot Obtain Civil Penalties Without a Jury Trial, TechFreedom Tells Supreme Court
Today, TechFreedom filed an amicus brief urging the U.S. Supreme Court to strike down a statutory scheme that enables the Federal Communications Commission to impose...
Upcoming Webinar: A Shift in California Antitrust Law
We’re excited to announce the tenth installment of our “Tech in the Courts” webinar series, presented by TechFreedom and Washington Legal Foundation. The event is...
Arkansas Can’t Wall Off Social Media, TechFreedom Tells Eighth Circuit
Yesterday, TechFreedom filed an amicus brief urging the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit to affirm a district court order blocking the Arkansas...
