

My fellow petitioners,
Today, the Digital Liberty Act reached 200 signatures.
I am honored that so many people agreed strongly enough to stop what they were doing, create an account, verify their identity, and sign a petition they believe in.
A "like" button takes a second and is often forgotten.
Two hundred people chose not to be forgotten.
Those 200 signatures come from different states, nations, cultures, backgrounds, and walks of life. They represent a growing belief that digital rights deserve the same attention and protection as rights in the physical world.
But 200 is only the beginning.
We must grow from 200 to 500, from 500 to 1,000, and beyond.
The data, signatures, comments, and support gathered so far will be included in future updates and discussions with legislators and public officials. Every signature strengthens the argument that these concerns are not isolated complaints—they are shared by ordinary people across society.
You can help.
Share the petition.Share the signature count.Read the Digital Liberty Act.Criticize it.Challenge it.Improve it.
The DLA was never intended to be a finished product. It is a draft, a blueprint, and a starting point for a larger conversation about privacy, free expression, due process, ownership, and digital rights.
The idea is already on the record and in the hands of people in positions to see it.
Now it needs momentum.
If 200 strangers were willing to stand together, then 1,000 is possible.
Change rarely arrives on its own.
Sometimes ordinary people must build it themselves.
Let's keep building.