• NSA 'gets data from Angry Birds'
    3 replies, posted
[url]http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-25922569#sa-ns_mchannel=rss&ns_source=PublicRSS20-sa[/url]
It's such a farce, but it's so sad.
The report really is just "spying on mobile games". Angry Birds being the biggest one is just stuck into the headline.
The more info that comes out about the NSA the less worried people should be. They do THIS, then tomorrow it's they also do this, and then this, and they also do this. Well that seems like a lot, then you realize it's one agency and it's 300 million, being conservative, people that they 'collect data' on. It's information overload to a point that they have to pick one out of probably 150 to 200 thousand people for it to be of any use And we live in a world where everyone puts all their info on Facebook, which is linked to any number of different accounts elsewhere, along with their laptops or phones that they take around with them, so why is this worrying anyone? To me it's not a big deal. It isn't like the NSA is the first or worst to do this. It dates back to the beginning of our civilization. The more that comes out, the more I realize that there's just too much information for them to go through unless they specifically target someone, and I ain't building bombs so it ain't me Besides. I remember in the late 90's when my ISP would leave a non-automated message on the answering machine every time I made a forum post using foul language (AT&T). The NSA is less intrusive than other companies we put up with
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