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Facebook and Google forcing countries to trust them
Please have a look at this scary title, just appeared on the Web:
Internet of things, who's right? UK or Denmark?
It’s always fun, and useful, when two or more news, that somehow go against each other, are published in the same day. Last Friday we had:
What almost nobody is telling you about the ApplevsFBI case
FBI says that Apple must help them, because nobody else can do it, to unlock the iPhone used by San Bernardino shooter. The complete story is quite more complex than this one-sentence summary, but there is **one **part of it that, as far as I can see has received almost **zero **attention so far (*):
The background you should put on your smartphone
In the 80’s, we all laughed like crazy at this Pioneer commercial, thinking
Are our governments spying on us? How much? Part 2
(this page is part of the Family Guide to Digital Freedom, 2007 edition. Please do read that introduction to know more about the Guide, especially if you mean to comment this page. Thanks)
(continues from here)
Is it legal to protect personal information?
It is possible, in order to keep private any personal files you may have on your computer, to digitally encode them. In some countries, however, you could already be prosecuted if you don’t renounce this protection when the Police “ask” you to do so.