Surveillance capitalism’ is increasingly threatening workers’ collective action and the human right to public protest, explain Oliver Roethig, Regional Secretary of UNI Europa and Diego Naranjo, Policy Director at EDRi in their piece for Social Europe entitled: workplace, public space: workers organising in the age of facial recognition.
“Imposing an omnipresent sense of being watched, surveillance has a clear chilling effect on workers’ readiness to exercise their right to freedom of assembly.”@ORoethig & @DNBSevilla on impact of #surveillance on worker organizing.#ReclaimYourFacehttps://t.co/WfppOBP24H
— UNI Europa (@UNI_Europa) June 2, 2021
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