Did the Government spy on Trump? Of course, it spies on all of us

MindWars

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Oct 14, 2016
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There was high drama last week when Rep. Devin Nunes announced at the White House that he had seen evidence that the communications of the Donald Trump campaign people, and perhaps even Trump himself, had been “incidentally collected” by the US government.

President Trump should use Obama admin's surveillance as a teaching moment
Did the Government Spy on Trump? Of Course. It Spies on All of Us!
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Some don't have a clue, some don't care but oh well the information is out there. Some had better start caring it goes deeper into your life than it should.
 
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If the government is spying on me, they have too much time and too much money on their hands.
 
There was high drama last week when Rep. Devin Nunes announced at the White House that he had seen evidence that the communications of the Donald Trump campaign people, and perhaps even Trump himself, had been “incidentally collected” by the US government.

President Trump should use Obama admin's surveillance as a teaching moment
Did the Government Spy on Trump? Of Course. It Spies on All of Us!
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Some don't have a clue, some don't care but oh well the information is out there. Some had better start caring it goes deeper into your life than it should.
And they are still spying even with Trumpet as president..
 
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if the gubmint spies on us all why didn't the Trumpsters know that?

they that clueless?


Do you lock your doors at night?

How about posting your information in this Post.............You have nothing to hide, there' snothing to worry about right.


How about leaving us your email pass words too, and the pass word to your phone oh wait the Government does not need a pass word to read your text messages....

If you only knew the dangers of this u wouldnt dare think it's all a joke
 
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It's been going on longer than most even realize.............

Cybersecurity Bill FAQ: The Disturbing Privacy Dangers in CISPA and How To Stop It

This week, EFF—along with a host of other civil liberties groups—are protesting the dangerous new cybersecurity bill known as CISPA that will be voted on in the House on April 23. EFF has compiled an FAQ detailing the how the bill's major provisions work and how they endanger all Internet users' privacy.

Update 2: This FAQ does not apply to the most recently introduced version of CISPA. An FAQ about the newest version can be found here.

Update 1: The White House released a statement on Tuesday criticizing CISPA and said any cybersecurity bill with information sharing provisions "must include robust safeguards to preserve the privacy and civil liberties of our citizens." The White House declared they would not support a bill that would "sacrifice the privacy of our citizens in the name of security." Below are all the ways CISPA would violate that principle.

H.R. 3523). The bill purports to allow companies and the federal government to share information to prevent or defend from cyberattacks. However, the bill expressly authorizes monitoring of our private communications, and is written so broadly that it allows companies to hand over large swaths of personal information to the government with no judicial oversight—effectively creating a “cybersecurity” loophole in all existing privacy laws. Because the bill is so hotly debated now, unofficial proposed amendments are also being circulated and the actual bill language is in flux.

Under CISPA, can a private company read my emails?

Yes. Under CISPA, any company can “use cybersecurity systems to identify and obtain cyber threat information to protect the rights and property” of the company. This phrase is being interpreted to mean monitoring your communications—including the contents of email or private messages on Facebook.

Right now, well-established laws, like the Wiretap Act and the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, prevent companies from routinely monitoring your private communications. Communications service providers may only engage in reasonable monitoring that balances the providers' needs to protect their rights and property with their subscribers' right to privacy in their communications. And these laws expressly allow lawsuits against companies that go too far. CISPA destroys these protections by declaring that any provision in CISPA is effective “notwithstanding any other law” and by creating a broad immunity for companies against both civil and criminal liability. This means companies can bypass all existing laws, as long as they claim a vague “cybersecurity” purpose.
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2012/...ing-privacy-dangers-cispa-and-how-you-stop-it
 

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