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submitted 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

Every search you make, email you send, text message, voice chat, location, and most likely the conversations you have in your own home are monitored and stored in a database for whoever knows how long (probably forever). When I hear land of the free, I immediately think bullshit. We are slowly losing our freedoms, what can we do to prevent this? I mean, when Edward Snowden dropped the leaks, people protested, but barely anything changed. What can we do? This post not only applies to Americans, your own government in another country may possibly does the same thing. Feel free to comment!

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[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

Well, theoretically they can, and it's already been proven that they can tap into anyone's phone, so what's stopping the NSA from spying this much? The use of proprietary software in literally everything, and companies such as Google, Microsoft, Apple, etc. secretly working with them, not only that, but the amount of exploits the NSA has on hand is insane.

[-] [email protected] 0 points 2 weeks ago

theoretically they can

Is this a purely theoretical capability or is there actually evidence they have this capability?

it's already been proven that they can tap into anyone's phone

Listening into a conversation that you’re intentionally relaying across public infrastructure and gaining access to the phone itself are two very different things.

The use of proprietary software in literally everything

  1. Speak for yourself. And let’s be real, if you’re on Lemmy you’re 10 times more likely to be running Linux.
  2. Proprietary != closed source
  3. Do you really think that just because something is closed source means that it can’t be analyzed?

the amount of exploits the NSA has on hand

How many zero-day exploits does the NSA have? How many can be deployed remotely and without a nontrivial action by a user?

what's stopping the NSA from spying this much?

Scale, capacity, cost, number of employees

—-

I’m not saying we shouldn’t oppose government surveillance. We absolutely should. But like another commenter pointed out, I’m much more concerned with the amount of data that corporations collect and have.

this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2024
56 points (75.9% liked)

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