Nevada
Reject Nevada’s Attack on Encrypted Messaging, EFF Tells Court
LAS VEGAS — The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and a coalition of partners urged a court to protect default encrypted messaging and children’s privacy and security in a brief filed today.
The brief by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), the ACLU of Nevada, the EFF, Stanford Internet Observatory Research Scholar Riana Pfefferkorn, and six other organizations asks the court to reject a request by Nevada’s attorney general to stop Meta from offering end-to-end encryption by default to Facebook Messenger users under 18 in the state. The brief was also signed by Access Now, Center for Democracy & Technology (CDT), Fight for the Future, Internet Society, Mozilla, and Signal Messenger LLC.
Communications are safer when third parties can’t listen in on them. That’s why the EFF and others who care about privacy pushed Meta for years to make end-to-end encryption the default option in Messenger. Meta finally made the change, but Nevada wants to turn back the clock. As the brief notes, end-to-end encryption “means that even if someone intercepts the messages—whether they are a criminal, a domestic abuser, a foreign despot, or law enforcement—they will not be able to decipher or access the message.” The state of Nevada, however, bizarrely argues that young people would be better off without this protection.
“Encryption is the best tool we have for safeguarding our privacy and security online — and privacy and security are especially important for young people,” said EFF Surveillance Litigation Director Andrew Crocker. “Nevada’s argument that children need to be ‘protected’ from securely communicating isn’t just baffling; it’s dangerous.”
As explained in a friend-of-the-court brief filed by the EFF and others today, encryption is one of the best ways to reclaim our privacy and security in a digital world full of cyberattacks and security breaches. It is increasingly being deployed across the internet as a way to protect users and data. For children and their families especially, encrypted communication is one of the strongest safeguards they have against malicious misuse of their private messages — a safeguard Nevada seeks to deny them.
“The European Court of Human Rights recently rejected a Russian law that would have imposed similar requirements on services that offer end-to-end message encryption – finding that it violated human rights and EU law to deny people the security and privacy that encryption provides,” said EFF’s Executive Director Cindy Cohn. “Nevada’s attempt should be similarly rejected.”
In its motion to the court, Nevada argues that it is necessary to block end-to-end encryption on Facebook Messenger because it can impede some criminal investigations involving children. This ignores that law enforcement can and does conduct investigations involving encrypted messages, which can be reported by users and accessed from either the sender or recipient’s devices. It also ignores law enforcement’s use of the tremendous amount of additional information about users that Meta routinely collects.
The brief notes that co-amicus Pfeffercorn recently authored a study that confirmed that Nevada does not, in fact, need to block encryption to do its investigations. The study found that “content-oblivious” investigation methods are “considered more useful than monitoring the contents of users’ communications when it comes to detecting nearly every kind of online abuse.”
“The court should reject Nevada’s motion,” said EFF’s Crocker. “Making children more vulnerable in just to make law enforcement investigators’ jobs slightly easier is an uneceesary and dangerous trade off.”
For the brief: https://www.eff.org/document/nevada-v-meta-amicus-brief
Nevada
Girl Scouts of Southern Nevada launch cookie season with massive Mega Drop
LAS VEGAS (KSNV) — The Girl Scouts of Southern Nevada kicked off their cookie season with a Mega Drop event at Cowabunga Bay on Saturday morning.
During the event, 29,629 cases, totaling 355,548 boxes of Girl Scout Cookies, were distributed to ensure local troops are fully stocked for the season.
Additional inventory was also distributed through the council office.
This annual event supports local Girl Scouts in building entrepreneurial, leadership, and goal-setting skills.
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Cookie season is officially underway, offering a perfect opportunity to support local Girl Scouts by purchasing your favorite cookies.
Nevada
AMPLIFIED: Free e-scooter safety classes available as Nevada studies regulations
LAS VEGAS (FOX5) — The College of Southern Nevada is offering free e-scooter and e-bike safety classes for families as Nevada prepares to study statewide regulations for the increasingly popular electric vehicles.
The two-hour classes at all CSN campuses teach road rules, proper safety equipment and accident prevention techniques as hospitals report a surge in serious injuries from e-scooter crashes.
“The motorcycle program manager for CSN said she’s seeing too many kids, too many adults breaking road rules or not knowing what they’re doing,” said FOX5 reporter Jaclyn Schultz, who covered the safety initiative.
Parents unaware of vehicle capabilities
Many parents purchase e-scooters and e-bikes without understanding their speed capabilities or legal requirements, according to Schultz’s reporting.
“They go to Costco, Sam’s Club, even get it from Amazon or just online,” Schultz said.
Some electric vehicles classified as motorcycles require riders to be 16 or older, but can be purchased online without age verification.
“Parents don’t know what their kids are getting,” Schultz said.
Safety gear required to prevent serious injuries
Unlike traditional bicycles and scooters, high-speed electric vehicles can cause severe trauma requiring emergency room treatment rather than basic first aid.
“When these things are going 25, 35, 45 miles an hour, then you’re talking serious head trauma injuries, concussions, broken skulls, broken bones, major physical therapy. These people don’t end up in the urgent care, they’re in the ER,” Schultz said.
The CSN classes teach that many e-scooters require motorcycle-grade safety equipment rather than standard bicycle helmets.
“So many people don’t know that for an e-scooter or some of those fast devices, you need a motorcycle helmet. Anything less won’t protect you. You might need motorcycle gear on your body, like a jacket or pants with armor. You might need wrist guards,” Schultz said.
Accident surge after holidays
Sunrise Hospital trauma center reported increased accidents in the beginning of 2026.
“I did a story recently on a surge of accidents being seen at Sunrise Trauma from adults, from children. They’re even suspecting that maybe a lot more children are getting hurt because they got presents over the holidays,” Schultz said.
Nevada launches comprehensive study
State lawmakers plan to study e-scooter regulations over the next several months after declining to address the issue during a recent special legislative session.
“Lawmakers are going to get testimony from law enforcement, from school officials, public safety officials, and medical experts… to try to bring it back for the next legislative session,” Schultz said.
A CSN motorcycle instructor described the current situation as “the wild, wild west” due to the lack of comprehensive regulations.
“Every state, every community is grappling with how to make laws keep pace with the pace of technology,” Schultz said.
Potential statewide regulations could include mandatory helmets, speed limits, safety gear requirements, and age restrictions for different vehicle classifications.
Copyright 2026 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Korean students visit the University
Fourteen students from South Korea’s National University of Education (KNUE) visited the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Nevada, Reno at the start of the Spring 2026 semester. They visited several local schools and institutions to learn about the U.S. educational system and culture during the weeklong program. These students are studying in teacher preparation programs in South Korea.
During the week, the students visited several local public schools, including Doral Academy, Hug High School, Debbie Smith Academy and Herz Middle School. Students had a chance to tour each school and visit classrooms to get a firsthand look at how U.S. students learn. On the University campus, students sat in on several College of Education and Human Development courses throughout the week and visited the Child and Family Research Center. The students also visited the University’s Lake Tahoe campus.
KNUE students enjoyed s’mores at the University’s Lake Tahoe campus.
For both universities, this program gives students and faculty the opportunity to collaboratively build a global perspective on education. By learning from each other’s ideas, both cultures can strengthen and grow their own education systems. And for KNUE, building this globalized, interconnected culture is a top priority.
“I want our students to be interconnected with the University of Nevada, Reno,” said Joosang Lee, a KNUE faculty member who accompanied the students on the trip. “And then they will have an open mind about other people, other cultures and other countries.”
“I went on this trip because I wanted to learn more about diversity around the world,” said Chaeyun Lee, a student studying music education at KNUE. “I wanted to meet people from all over the world and have conversations with them. And I wanted to learn how the U.S. education system works and how students communicate with their teachers and professors.”
Cultivating connections among students has been an important part of the program. Several events throughout the week were held for both University of Nevada, Reno and KNUE students, where they had a chance to mingle while learning about each other’s cultures. The event organizers wanted to create opportunities for students to learn about each other’s broader cultures in a curious, inclusive space.
“That’s something I really admire about our environment here,” said doctoral student Hanine Haidar, who helped coordinate this year’s program. “The way we don’t minimize people to just food, or singular elements of their culture, but we maximize them by accepting them for who they are.”
The program was first established by an MOU (Memorandum of Understanding) signed between University of Nevada, Reno President Brian Sandoval and Korea National University of Education President Kim Jongwoo in late 2023, and the first visit by South Korean students was held in January 2024. Each year since, students from both universities have visited each other’s countries and institutions.
In May, several University of Nevada, Reno students will visit KNUE. This program gives an opportunity for this year’s cohort of University of Nevada, Reno students to meet the South Korean students now, so they will already have connections when they visit South Korea in March 2026.
“This program has provided excellent opportunities for our future teachers to experience diverse educational settings and cultures, enhance their understanding of different educational approaches and build friendships through interactions with pre-service teachers from two different countries,” said Hyun-Joo Jeon, Ph.D., professor of Human Development and Family Science, who developed and led the short-term exchange program.
(From left to right) Mehmet Tosun, Joosang Lee, Man Seob Lee, Mihyun Koh, Hyun-Joo Jeon, Ramya Fernandez and Dean Donald Easton-Brooks.
“It was very important for us to create events where these students would get to interact a lot over this week, so that when our students go to South Korea, they have some connections that they made from their visit here,” said Ramya Fernandez, CPA, MPH, assistant dean of operations, who helped coordinate this year’s program.
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