How to Understand and Manage EFF's New Opt-In Email Tracking
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Introduction
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) recently updated its privacy policy for the first time since 2022. While most changes involve clarifications and improved transparency—especially concerning third-party tools—one significant update introduces a new opt-in email tracking feature. This guide explains what changed, why it matters, and how you can manage your consent. EFF remains committed to privacy; they’ve never used email tracking pixels and won’t start now. But they want your permission to learn how their advocacy emails resonate with you. Here’s how it works.

What You Need
- An email address subscribed to EFF’s mailing list (e.g., campaigns, newsletters).
- A basic understanding of email tracking (opens and clicks).
- Access to email from EFF (check your inbox or spam folder).
Step-by-Step Guide
- Step 1: Understand the Change
EFF now offers you the option to allow them to see whether you open their emails and which links you click. This is explicit opt-in consent—you must say “yes” for any tracking to occur. No data is shared, sold, or used to build profiles. It’s purely aggregate to improve campaigns. - Step 2: Look for the Consent Request
During an upcoming email campaign, you’ll receive a message with a clear choice: allow tracking (opt-in) or decline. If you ignore it, nothing changes—EFF won’t track you without permission. They ask only once, but you can change your mind anytime. - Step 3: Decide Whether to Opt In
Consider: Do you want to help EFF understand which topics engage you most? Opting in gives them a rough picture of what works, aiding their advocacy for freedom and justice. If you value this mission and trust EFF (as many members do), saying yes can make their efforts more effective. - Step 4: Respond to the Request
Click the link in the email to give consent. No dark patterns—just a straightforward “yes” button. If you say no or ignore, no tracking occurs. The choice is yours, and EFF encourages an informed decision. - Step 5: Monitor and Adjust Later
If you opted in, you can always revoke consent. Use the opt-out link in any future email or email membership@eff.org to request removal. Your status changes immediately. - Step 6: Know Your Rights
EFF opposes nonconsensual tracking and this update aligns with that. Unlike most organizations that sneakily embed tracking pixels, EFF asks first. You have full control—no automatic tracking, no hidden defaults.
Tips for Making the Most of This Change
- Trust matters: EFF has never sold or misused data. Their opt-in approach is rare—only 1 in 3 emails today get explicit consent for tracking. By participating, you support ethical email practices.
- Think before clicking: Even with consent, you control what you share. If you’re uncomfortable, just skip opt-in; your experience remains unchanged.
- Expected impact: With opt-in, EFF gains insights to tailor campaigns—more on topics you care about, less on irrelevant ones. It’s like giving constructive feedback.
By following these steps, you can confidently manage your privacy with EFF’s updated policy. Remember: they ask because they respect you. That’s rare on the web today.

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