Why NSA spied on inexplicably unencrypted Windows crash reports
seen from United States
seen from Lebanon
seen from Ecuador

seen from Portugal

seen from Brazil
seen from Canada
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from China

seen from Canada
seen from China

seen from Portugal
seen from Uruguay

seen from Germany
seen from Brazil
seen from Libya

seen from Malaysia
seen from Finland

seen from Portugal
Why NSA spied on inexplicably unencrypted Windows crash reports
How-to: Countersurveillance Part 10 - PRISM BREAK
Sag NEIN zu globalen Spionageprogrammen wie PRISM, X-Keyscore oder Tempora. Stopp die Verfolgung Deiner Onlineaktivitäten durch Regierungen mit diesen freien Alternativen zu proprietärer Software.
It's not merely a matter of whether or not we have something to hide, because it is not us that will decide whether we have something to hide. It is an analyst somewhere, it is a machine learning algorithm somewhere. And this is the thing that is perhaps the most terrifying; because people are flagged, then other people are dispatched. Each person plays their role, and more and more a machine plays that role—a machine that does not understand constitutional protections, does not understand the Magna Carta or the Bill of Rights, does not understand humanity. It's a machine. And the humans, they behave like machines too, which is a great fear: that humans will start to behave like machines. So what is at stake is in fact democracy—where we still have it—and a free press.
Jacob Appelbaum on the ever-present international surveillance state, today on Democracy Now!