RE: Do we need the NSA?
March 12, 2017 at 12:16 am
(This post was last modified: March 12, 2017 at 12:38 am by Sterben.)
(March 11, 2017 at 10:51 pm)mh.brewer Wrote:Have a look at this document (https://www.theguardian.com/world/intera...ourt-order) also read this one as well. (https://www.extremetech.com/internet/169...atacenters), also the full version of the Patriot Act (https://epic.org/privacy/terrorism/hr3162.html)(March 11, 2017 at 10:03 pm)Sterben Wrote: Data from google, Microsoft, facebook, and other sources by tapping into their private servers. (https://search.wikileaks.org/?q=NSA) they have been caught many times getting data from private tech firms and citizens. We already know key words trigger an alarm within their system, which is a cause for alarm. If one wanted to search for information on Isis, you would to be masked behind a VPN, a proxy, a virtually machine, then another proxy inside the Linux based OS, connected to Tor, and once inside Tor, you have to connect to proxy based website, after all that there is little chance they would be able to find out who is looking for info on Isis.
That's a mouth full of steps just to get info without getting put on a watch list. Not even that is a 100% though, if you want to be as close to 100%, you would need a burner computer that has never been connected to your own home wifi. By means of public Wifi, you repeat the steps, save the documents to a flash drive. Then your a bit safer from the prying eyes of the NSA and CIA. It seems like a lot of work if your not doing any illegal, but they have no right to put people on a watch list just for trying to get info on something.
Thanks for the link but I saw nothing about illegal activity and I'm not going to do your work. What specifically have they done that has been considered illegal by the courts (US or International)? I understand that you don't like their activities but that was not my question. They may have done many illegal things, I just don't know about them. This is your chance to educate me with some specifics.
This is some proof I can give you safely provide without sending you the deep web, if you know how to find to use it. View those files at your own risk, a lot of those files were not suppose to have been seen by the American public. If you want I can provide you the real wikileaks site on the deep web if you use Tor.
See what I mean now? You needed FISA court approval to look into someones personal call details, with that court order Verizon has no choice but to give them what they want at the drop of hat. That goes against our right to privacy and causes privacy issues. If a consumer found out his or her records can be taken without a court order from FISA, how is that fair to the client. Even if they were guilty of something, you needed clear evidence before you could even ask for call and or text messaging logs.