An American privacy emergency: Guest post from Cynthia Dwork et al. 0 ▲ Shtetl-Optimized 1 hour ago · 10 min read1913 words · Politics · hide · 0 comments Scott’s foreword: Cynthia Dwork is Gordon McKay Professor of Computer Science at Harvard, and a pioneer in the fields of differential privacy and algorithmic fairness. On my recent travels to the SigmaWest science camp and then STOC, there was much talk about a recent Trump administration action that would ban not only differential privacy, but essentially all modern techniques for preserving privacy in large datasets, for example in the 2030 US Census. I realize that many of us have “outrage fatigue,” but this particular outrage hits extremely close to home for the CS theory community. So when Cynthia approached me at STOC to propose a guest post on the issue, of course I said yes. The post that she sent me, below, is cosigned by many other leaders in the field. On June 4, 2026, the U.S. Secretary of Commerce issued a directive (DAO 216-26) relegating confidentiality protection in all Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) and U.S. Census Bureau publications to techniques dating back to… No comments yet. Log in to reply on the Fediverse. Comments will appear here.