http://www.h-online.com/security/news/i ... 62870.html

At first I only wanted to create a thread about how Microsoft spies on Skype users, but then decided to also make this about PRISM in general. The reason I named Microsoft first is because they were the very first to join PRISM and send collected data to the NSA.Keres wrote:I love how you singled out Microsoft alone in the original version of the thread title, then changed it in an apparent attempt to maintain some facade of impartiality.
PRISM was launched from the ashes of President George W. Bush’s secret program of warrantless domestic surveillance in 2007, after news media disclosures, lawsuits and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court forced the president to look for new authority.
Congress obliged with the Protect America Act in 2007 and the FISA Amendments Act of 2008, which immunized private companies that cooperated voluntarily with U.S. intelligence collection. PRISM recruited its first partner, Microsoft, and began six years of rapidly growing data collection beneath the surface of a roiling national debate on surveillance and privacy.
Encryption? I'm guessing we'll only be able to tell how much data it sends, not what data it sends.Keres wrote:I love how you singled out Microsoft alone in the original version of the thread title, then changed it in an apparent attempt to maintain some facade of impartiality.
That said, as soon as the XBONE is out, you can bet that there'll be hundreds of people with packet sniffers inspecting whatever data the Kinect and/or the console sends up to Microsoft, so all of the speculation about "Kinect spying" can either be proven or disproven.
I agree with you on the caution but when you don't use the biggest email providers, chances are a lot higher that your email account will disappear down the line.Friendly wrote:I don't use Hotmail, Bing, Gmail (I even try to avoid sending emails to to gmail accounts), I don't accept cookies from Google, have no Youtube or Facebook account.
If anyone ever believed the whole "don't be evil" thing for a second, I honestly don't know what to tell them.Ganelon wrote:It's hilarious in hindsight how hypocritical Google was in backing out of China though.
Carter tried to rein in the intelligence apparatus after the revelation of Cointelpro and whatnot. He failed. When the interests of entrenched bureaucracy, politicians, the military-industrial complex, law enforcement, private prison industry, and various other big businesses are all aligned? They aren't going to give up just because of a temporary media ruckus, or hearings or "investigations."Has the whole hastily-'roided up, money-chugging "national security" structure already become such a force of nature, and have its critics been beaten down like dogs so many times, that nobody's willing or able to roll it back?
People are so caught up in the pro-western democracy news filtering that they can't see the woods for the trees. This Prism data collection business isn't news for some people, it's been commonly acknowledged by (non-conspiracy theorist) groups that the likes of Google and Facebook share information with the government for years.Ganelon wrote: It's hilarious in hindsight how hypocritical Google was in backing out of China though.
ChurchOfSolipsism wrote: ALso, this is how SKykid usually posts
I'm not one to share these beliefs, but I think that common knowledge about the widening of this intelligence net, along with a lack of specifics, and the reality of the indefinite detention of foreign nationals, has lead many of these people to believe that the government is going to unleash something like what you see in Deus Ex: Human Revolution - infringement of privacy and mass detention or disappearances. Add in the recent track record of elected members of the government and top members of bureaucracies not paying attention to people's demands that government policy not continue its class warfare against people who aren't in the top 1% or 2% - the government really is at a low ebb for accountability.ED-057 wrote:Meanwhile, the latest Washington Spectator printed poll results indicating that 29% of Americans believe armed resistance against the government to preserve liberty may become necessary "in the next few years." I find this to be shockingly high. It was not specified what the respondants' particular concerns were though, so I don't know if this sentiment has anything to do with, for instance, utter disregard for the Bill of Rights.
My optimistic side (yes, I do have oneED-057 wrote:\When the interests of entrenched bureaucracy, politicians, the military-industrial complex, law enforcement, private prison industry, and various other big businesses are all aligned? They aren't going to give up just because of a temporary media ruckus, or hearings or "investigations."
I really hope that number was somehow massaged to make for a more shocking headline, since the last thing we need in times like these are more Ted Nugents (or, more accurately, people who take Ted Nugent seriously, as the draft-dodging gasbag himself will never do anything but talk). No matter how many guns we buy the government is better-armed than us and so are the corporatists; meaningful change will have to come about via other means, because on that front everyone else is trumped from the start.Meanwhile, the latest Washington Spectator printed poll results indicating that 29% of Americans believe armed resistance against the government to preserve liberty may become necessary "in the next few years."
With the week ending, I daresay this news might overall be beneficial for Obama. Most folks online nowadays have been conditioned to knowing that nothing is private. The GOP seems to have retreated significantly from previous weeks when Obama was constantly attacked for the IRS, DOJ, and Benghazi blunders. I wouldn't be surprised if prominent folks on the other side of the aisle were praising Obama in private for extending this Bush policy. So much for conservative values from either party; our new pledge should be national security and justice for all.BulletMagnet wrote:My optimistic side (yes, I do have one) wonders if an issue like this couldn't finally work as a way to bring those on both sides of the political aisle together, decisively, as the two definitely have a nice sharp axe to grind with a good amount of crossover, but there's so much money flowing around this sector that heaven only knows who of consequence would actually show up.
That was a good interview.Ed Oscuro wrote: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/ju ... tions-live
yup - there's a whole bunch of choices out there, people can vote with their wallets.xgunnBlaze wrote:Rather than focusing on the XB1 with all of this drama and bad news, why not focus on other consoles, which have good things going for them? I do get a kick out of that "Xbox One Reveal 2013 Highlights" video on youtube, but I think I would be drained/angry if all I heard was this depressing news about the XB1...