The After School Access Project from UScellular

Earlier this year we were approached by UScellular, a national cellular network company, about a mobile Wi-Fi hotspot donation program they have been developing. Their program, called After School Access Project, is aimed at overcoming the digital divide by providing free hotspots and two years of free internet service to nonprofits that are working with families where youth may benefit from a better internet connection to access their educational needs.

NNEDV and the Safety Net team communicated with representatives from UScellular to learn more about their donation program and to assess it for potential privacy or safety concerns for survivors of abuse. We believe that advocacy organizations could benefit from learning more about the program and how it might help the survivors they work with. Here are some key things to know about the program:

  • The donation program works with the nonprofit that applies to it and UScellular only interacts with that nonprofit applicant. UScellular does not directly interact with the recipients of the hotspots.

  • UScellular will ship hotspots to nonprofits, and those nonprofits can then provide them to people they are working with who have kids that could use them. UScellular will not ask the nonprofit for any information about the people they provide the hotspots to, or associate other identifying user information with specific hotspots.

  • UScellular will request the ZIP code of the receiving nonprofit to ensure the organization is within their coverage area, but will not request any other location information from the nonprofit.

  • The hotspots and internet service are completely free. Because no contact information about hotspot users is gathered, UScellular will not be able to send marketing materials to the recipients.

If your program is interested in this, here are some additional pieces to consider to ensure privacy and safety:

  • UScellular will set the hotspots up with each individual nonprofit, giving the hotspot a network name that can be requested by the program. If you are a program that has a name that is identifiable as a domestic and/or sexual violence victim services provider, we would suggest not using your agency’s name as the network name. When survivors use the hotspots in their home, this network name will be one of the wireless networks that will be visible when people nearby search for a Wi-Fi network.

  • When providing shipping information for the hotspots, make sure you’re only providing your nonprofit’s public office address.

  • Providing these hotspots as a resource will be a good opportunity to talk through Wi-Fi security and privacy with the survivor.

  • Like all mobile telecommunications service providers (TSPs), UScellular has the ability to geolocate any device connected to their network, even if those devices do not have GPS capabilities (which these hotspots do not). UScellular has told us that they retain geolocation data for devices on their network for a rolling twelve-month period, but they do not provide any user-accessible geolocation services for their hotspots.

  • All TSPs based in the United States receive lawful requests for information from law enforcement, and they generally comply with those requests. With that information, it is possible law enforcement could then connect internet traffic with a device.

Because of limitations in their national coverage, this program is only available where they currently operate. This includes most of: Illinois (not Chicago), Iowa, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Missouri, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Texas, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. They also have coverage in small, select areas of California and Pennsylvania. We have communicated the importance of expanding their network to truly be able to address the digital divide across the country and in the territories.  They have indicated that this is a goal of theirs. 

We wish this program was more widely available to be accessible to any state or territory.  We will continue to ask these questions and urge availability to NNEDV’s entire membership when these opportunities arise.  We understand the limitations of UScellular, but still wanted to share a potentially helpful resources for those where they have coverage. The digital divide was specifically cited as a barrier for survivors in our 2021 needs assessment and we hope that programs like these can help where possible. 

Apple’s New Safety Check is a Tool for Survivors

Yesterday, Apple announced their new Safety Check feature which allows Apple users to quickly secure their devices. This tool will be a helpful resource for survivors who are concerned about an abuser having access to their devices and accounts. 

Safety Check gives users two options: they can review all the ways that others may have access to their information and individually customize settings or they can do a quick safety reset to  stop all access others may have to track location, messages, apps, or anything else. 

Apple worked with the Safety Net Project at the National Network to End Domestic Violence (NNEDV), the National Center for Victims of Crime (NCVC), and our sister organization in Australia, WESNET. We are grateful Apple reached out to experts to get feedback in the development of Safety Check and that they incorporated our input to create a tool that gives users control and choices to increase their privacy and safety. 

Learn more about Safety Check here and visit our Survivor Technology Safety & Privacy Toolkit for more about technology and abuse.

Building Online Spaces Safe from Sexual Harassment

Image from the National Sexual Violence Resource Center.

Since 2011, April has been recognized as Sexual Assault Awareness Month (SAAM) with an annual national SAAM theme developed by the National Sexual Violence Resource Center (NSVRC). The theme for 2022 is Building Safe Online Spaces Together, a call to action that the NSVRC states “…is possible when we practice digital consent, intervene when we see harmful content and behaviors, and promote online communities that value respect, inclusion, and safety.”

The Safety Net Project is often focused on the ways people can misuse technology to abuse others, and on developing tools to help survivors and their advocates respond to the abuse they experience. Of the different types of technology-facilitated abuse the Safety Net Projects works on, online sexual harassment is one of the most common and one of the biggest challenges we all face in the work of building safe online spaces together.

According to a 2020 survey by the Pew Research Institute 41% of all adults in the United States have experienced some form of online harassment [1]. Among adults under 35 years old, 33% of women and 11% of men have been sexually harassed online. Dating apps were the most common online space where sexual harassment was experienced (60% of women and 27% of men) by adults under 35 years old [2]. A survey of 10-18 year old adolescents in the U.S. found that 15% reported experiencing online sexual harassment [3].

Online sexual harassment can be defined as unwanted sexual conduct on any digital platform. The European Union’s Project deSHAME identified four distinct categories of online sexual harassment [4]:

  • Non-consensual sharing of intimate images and videos

    • Taking or sharing sexual images or videos of a person without that person’s consent.

  • Exploitation, coercion, and threats

    • Sending sexual threats, coercing a person into participating in sexual acts online, or using a person’s intimate images or other sexual content to blackmail that person.

  • Sexualized bullying

    • Using sexual content to upset, humiliate, exclude, or discriminate against a person

  • Unwanted sexualization

    • Sending unwanted sexual comments, images, jokes, or any other kind of content.

Like many other harms, the impact of experiencing online sexual harassment can be very different from one person to another. It’s important not to minimize the impact of harassment because it is online. There can still be significant trauma and fear. And, in many cases, online harassment can quickly move offline into other forms of sexual, physical, and financial, and emotional abuse.

 The NSVRC recommends several practices anyone can do to help build safe online spaces:

  • Practice digital consent

  • Intervene when you see harmful content and behaviors online

  • Promote online communities that value respect, inclusion, and safety

Positive reactions to abuse can help to prevent other harms in online spaces by establishing examples of behavior and interaction online that are grounded in respect. In real-world and online spaces, people create the spaces around them by being in them. How people are in those spaces helps determine if those spaces are safe and who those spaces are safe for. If people bring fundamental ideas like consent, respect, inclusion, and care for others into the spaces they exist in, then those spaces will be profoundly safer for everyone in them.

This April, we’re happy for the reminder that the goal of our work on the Safety Net Project and NNEDV is to build something better than what we have now, and working together is needed to do that. While joining survivors, advocates, communities, and the NSVRC in doing the work of building safer spaces everywhere, the Safety Net Project also supports the process of building by doing what we can give advocates the tools to work with survivors to make every day safer. Explore our website to learn about those tools, and explore the NSVRC’s Sexual Assault Awareness Month pages to learn more about SAAM.


[1] Vogels, E. A. (2021, January 13). The State of Online Harassment. Pew Research Center: Internet, Science & Tech. https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2021/01/13/the-state-of-online-harassment/

 [2] Anderson, M., & Vogels, E. A. (2020, May 6). Young women often face sexual harassment online – including on dating sites and apps. Pew Research Center. https://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2020/03/06/young-women-often-face-sexual-harassment-online-including-on-dating-sites-and-apps/

 [3] Copp, J. E., Mumford, E. A., & Taylor, B. G. (2021). Online sexual harassment and cyberbullying in a nationally representative sample of teens: Prevalence, predictors, and consequences. Journal of Adolescence, 93, 202–211. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.adolescence.2021.10.003

 [4] Defining online sexual harassment. (n.d.). Childnet. Retrieved April 19, 2022, from https://www.childnet.com/what-we-do/our-projects/project-deshame/defining-online-sexual-harassment/