Lets stop blowing this out of proportion, yeah, with the capital letters and exclamation marks in the title :urm:
Under the terms of the blanket order, the numbers of both parties on a call are handed over, as is location data, call duration, unique identifiers, and the time and duration of all calls. The contents of the conversation itself are not covered.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/jun/06/nsa-phone-records-verizon-court-order
Oh no, they know my location, how long I was calling and my number. Oh no! Stop wetting your panties,
they are going to be looking at people doing everything and storing it. That is the whole point.
So? If you've done nothing wrong what's the matter? Sure you can say well it's a breach of my privacy but what are they going to do? Oh they see you talking to someone on Skype about something, are they going to come and hunt you down and hold you hostage? Give me a break.
Anything you said or did breaking ANY law on the internet can now be held against you.
Can you show me a source for this? Isn't there a law in the US that like if a crime was comitted over X years ago nothing can be done or something? Or was that just in a film
- but yeah, source?
The new PS and XBOX gaming systems with have tags in them as well so as long as you have internet & have it plugged in, they will be able to hear & possibly see everything going on in your house.
I bet you still buy one. And tags? What are these tags? You mean the kinect/ps move cameras with mics? Solution: Don't plug them in or don't connect to the internet. Quantum physics, I know. You can thank me later.
If the government wants information on you, where you live, phone numbers, ect, they will be able to find you.
What they gonna do to me? Oh no! :upset:
Have any of you ever read 1984? That is exactly where the US is heading.
It's already there. Big Brother. You have CCTVs on most streets. Get used to it. We're civillians who need to be monitored because there's bad ones amongst us.
Section 215 dramatically broadened the scope of that power. Now the government can seize, as you said, any tangible thing. In addition, 215 removed the limitation that it had to be a suspected spy or terrorist whose records were being sought. Now, anyone's records can be sought. The only limitation is that the secret warrant has to be relevant to a national security investigation.
Did you even read your own articles?
As far as I'm aware, you aren't under a national security investigation. Are you?