SALON
Sunday, Jun 9, 2013 12:00 PM UTC
How to navigate the Internet around PRISM
Google and YouTube may be under NSA surveillance, but you can still surf the web without Big Brother watching
Topics:
the daily dot,
Internet,
FBI,
NSA,
Prism,
Surveillance,
Google,
Facebook,
Twitter,
YouTube, Technology News, Media News, Business News, Politics News
This article originally appeared on The Daily Dot.

Recently
released National Security Agency documents indicate the U.S.
government is “tapping directly into the central servers” of your
favorite Internet services as part of a secret program called PRISM.
So much for those privacy policies, huh?
The Guardian and Washington Post revealed the stunning extent of the PRISM snooping operation: the NSA and FBI are monitoring Microsoft, Google, YouTube, Yahoo, Facebook, Skype, Apple, and others.
Those
companies have largely denied the reports, saying they never allowed
the government direct access to their servers. Government officials have
admitted the program exists, however, and President Obama himself
defended it as legal in a Friday morning press conference.
Naturally,
privacy advocates are up in arms over the government having access to
their Internet data in this way, even if officials claim PRISM only
targets non-U.S. residents and citizens. These are some of the biggest
companies on the Internet, and they probably know more about you and
your activities than anyone else around.
Yet there are
still ways you can use the Internet without having to surrender your
personal information, data, and Internet habits to those firms in the
program.
That said, here’s your guide to using the Internet without using PRISM companies.
Social networking/Instant messaging
With Facebook perhaps out of the question, Twitter might
be your best answer for keeping up with your friends. The company is
not included in the list of PRISM firms and has a long track record of
standing up for user privacy, fighting courts on a number of occasions
to avoid revealing users’ true identities. Privacy advocate group the
Electronic Frontier Foundation in May awarded Twitter full marks for its efforts in protecting users from government monitoring.

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