A hub for human rights researchers around the globe who want to hold digital platforms, telecommunication companies, and other digital service companies accountable using RDR’s standards.

Every day, big tech and telecom companies bring their products and services onto the market without considering the risks that they may pose for people’s lives and rights.

At RDR, we work every day to hold these companies accountable for the harms they create, using international human rights standards. But we can’t do it alone.

Around the world, civil society groups and advocates are using and adapting our methods to evaluate and hold companies to account.

Are you ready to join our community?

Visit our guides, case studies, and downloadable resources to learn about our approach and design your project:

Adaptations

At RDR, we strive to be open and fully transparent in our work, so that we can be held accountable for our publications and our data, and so that other civil society organizations, researchers, advocates, and journalists can use our methodology to study regions and companies that we do not cover. Our partners have evaluated telecommunications companies and digital services in the Arab region, India, Iran, Kenya, Russia, Pakistan, Senegal, Ukraine, Angola, Central African Republic, Democratic Republic of Congo, Indonesia, Philippines, Maldives, Sri Lanka, Nepal, and Cambodia.

Our approach

The world’s most powerful digital platforms and telecommunications services control our abilities to connect, speak online, and access information. They collect and monetize our data at a massive scale. Yet there is so much we do not know about precisely how and under what terms they carry out these activities.

Since 2013, we have worked to promote human rights online by creating global standards and incentives for companies to respect and protect users’ privacy and freedom of expression and information. The main tool we use to carry out our mission is the RDR Corporate Accountability Index, including the Big Tech and Telco Giants scorecards, which evaluates the world’s most powerful digital platforms and telecommunications companies on their published policies with respect to human rights, measured against international human rights standards.

Why is transparency essential to accountability?

Our standards focus on corporate transparency because we believe that this is where accountability begins. When a company publishes policies for handling our data or adjudicating our speech online, we can scrutinize those policies and push the company to fully respect our rights. Our standards offer advocates a detailed guide for applying this type of scrutiny and ensuring that company policies protect our rights to privacy and freedom of expression and information at every turn.

We believe that transparency is only the first step for corporate accountability. Some companies have strong policies in place, but that doesn’t mean they always follow them.

When we see a company violating its own rules, we are able to use public documentation of corporate policies to hold the company to account. Our standards build on more than a decade of work by the human rights, privacy, and security communities. These standards are consistent with the U.N. Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, which affirm that just as governments have a duty to protect human rights, so do companies have a responsibility to respect them. They also draw on the Global Network Initiative principles and implementation guidelines, along with a body of emerging global standards and norms around data protection, security, and access to information.

Digital Rights Dialogues

Interviews with some of the digital rights researchers around the world using RDR’s standards to hold platforms and telcos accountable for upholding human rights.

How RDR is Helping GLAAD Turn the Tide on Online Hate

In this conversation, RDR’s Global Partnerships Manager Leandro Ucciferri and Senior Editor Sophia Crabbe-Field speak with Jenni Olson, the Senior Director of Social Media Safety at GLAAD, the national LGBTQ media advocacy organization, which campaigns on behalf of LGBTQ people in film, television, and print

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