Meta Can Do Better, If They Try

In its response to our letter campaign with Access Now, Meta takes issue with aspects of its score in RDR’s 2022 Big Tech Scorecard. Here’s why we stand by our results. Ranking Digital Rights wishes to address Meta’s response to the letter campaign led by

The 2022 BTS Executive Summary

Once again, none of the 14 digital platforms we evaluated earned a passing grade, despite incremental strides in some areas. The troubling conclusion is that, amid continued political instability in many of the world’s established democracies, and rising authoritarianism around the globe, and Russia’s invasion

Dissecting Big Tech’s shareholder showdown

Over the past weeks, Amazon, Meta, Twitter, and Alphabet (Google) all faced a shareholder reckoning. Nearly 50 petitions launched by investors across the four tech giants called on them to come clean on an array of issues. Many of those issues were related to human

An installation of an iceberg with a burning Facebook logo near the United States Capitol, in protest of rampant climate change misinformation on the social media platform,Thursday, Nov. 04, 2021, in Washington.

It’s time to bring down the barriers blocking shareholders on human rights

Scores of people and organizations, from individual “retail” investors to retirement funds, invest in the Big Tech companies. Of course, some investors are mainly focused on profits, but we know that many of them care deeply about the effects of these companies on the public interest, and they actively challenge companies to behave more responsibly.

Investor guidance

Jump to: Spotlight Latest Impact Resolutions Contact Spotlight Insights from our team highlighting topics that are critical to our human rights mission. Latest Long Reads Our impact with investors RDR maintains strong bonds with the investor community. Our methodology and standards were designed to respond

Meta Can Do Better, If They Try

In its response to our letter campaign with Access Now, Meta takes issue with aspects of its score in RDR’s 2022 Big Tech Scorecard. Here’s why we stand by our results. Ranking Digital Rights wishes to address Meta’s response to the letter campaign led by

The 2022 BTS Executive Summary

Once again, none of the 14 digital platforms we evaluated earned a passing grade, despite incremental strides in some areas. The troubling conclusion is that, amid continued political instability in many of the world’s established democracies, and rising authoritarianism around the globe, and Russia’s invasion

Dissecting Big Tech’s shareholder showdown

Over the past weeks, Amazon, Meta, Twitter, and Alphabet (Google) all faced a shareholder reckoning. Nearly 50 petitions launched by investors across the four tech giants called on them to come clean on an array of issues. Many of those issues were related to human

An installation of an iceberg with a burning Facebook logo near the United States Capitol, in protest of rampant climate change misinformation on the social media platform,Thursday, Nov. 04, 2021, in Washington.

It’s time to bring down the barriers blocking shareholders on human rights

Scores of people and organizations, from individual “retail” investors to retirement funds, invest in the Big Tech companies. Of course, some investors are mainly focused on profits, but we know that many of them care deeply about the effects of these companies on the public interest, and they actively challenge companies to behave more responsibly.

Investor guidance

Jump to: Spotlight Latest Impact Resolutions Contact Spotlight Insights from our team highlighting topics that are critical to our human rights mission. Latest Long Reads Our impact with investors RDR maintains strong bonds with the investor community. Our methodology and standards were designed to respond