There are chances that you might have thought of being watched by US
government through Gmail, Facebook and other internet giants who are
holding your sensitive and most private data.
The news is that all your fears were real, as a new secret document has
proven the existence of a US government program that grants NSA
(National Security Agency) and FBI the direct access to the servers of
Google, Facebook, Microsoft, Skype, Yahoo, Apple and other internet
companies, from where they can extract any user information at their
will.
Named as PRISM, the program was sanctioned by President Bush in 2007,
which is now renewed again by President Obama in December 2012.
Under this program, tech giants gave the direct access to its servers to
US government agencies, through which they can grab any information
they want, without any hurdle.
The information that NSA can access may include your emails, chats,
search history, images, videos, skype calls (even the content of skype
calls), YouTube videos (even those which are private), files that are
stored in your computer, call records of your smartphones, SMS, MMS,
places you visit and much more.
Microsoft joined this program before anyone, followed by Yahoo and
Google. Facebook, Skype, Youtube, AOL and Apple are also the program
partners who have given the direct access and they can obtain
information of any kind for any user who uses these services.
Dropbox is likely to be added in the list of partner companies soon.
PRISM enables US government agencies to reach directly into the servers
of the participating companies and obtain both stored communications as
well as perform real-time collection on targeted users.
Interestingly, US agencies call PRISM “one of the most valuable, unique and productive accesses for NSA”.
Another fact, which may worry our local “Privacy and Internet Freedom
Activists” to a greater level is that Pakistan is second largest spying
target of NSA, after Iran. Over 13.5 billion reports were gathered from
Pakistan in March 2013 only.
Given the amount of data we share with these companies, including our
personal and private information, this revelation is alarming and raise
countless serious questions, concerning the morality of tech companies
and US government.
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