Privacy experts fear the Supreme Court's decision to overturn federal abortion rights will erode other key protections and expose daily life online to criminal investigations.
Why it matters: The federal right to an abortion provided by Roe v. Wade had its foundation in the conception of a personal right to privacy, broadly believed to cover everything from contraception use to same-sex marriage.
The Supreme Court’s opinion in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization opens the door to overturning those protections.
What they're saying: "I do think that there are very legitimate reasons not to trust that the rest of the conservative majority on the Supreme Court will only impact abortion and no other rights, including privacy," Caitlin Chin, a fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told Axios.
"It's a very, very concerning landscape out there right now."
How it works: The Constitution does not explicitly guarantee a right to privacy, but court cases over the years have formed a sort of "penumbral" one (meaning a group of rights derived by implication from other rights), Margot Kaminski, a law professor at the University of Colorado, told Axios. The Roe ruling throws that into question.
Related Coverage
AllSides Picks
Red Blue Translator
Abstinence (Sex) Education
Headline Roundup
Education Dept. Offloads Special Ed, Civil Rights Responsibilities to Other Agencies
June 16th, 2026
Headline Roundup
Is Algae Already Growing Again in the Renovated Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool?
June 16th, 2026
Bias
The New York Post Moves from Lean Right to Right Bias Rating in Latest AllSides Editorial Review
AllSides Staff
June 16th, 2026