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    Virtual protest targets US internet snooping

    SAN FRANCISCO, USA: Google joined Internet rights activists on Tuesday, 11 February, in a virtual protest aimed at getting US law makers to reign in online snooping.
    An online protest to force the US government to halt its surveillance programs is underway in the USA. Image: Franky242
    An online protest to force the US government to halt its surveillance programs is underway in the USA. Image: Franky242 Free Digital Photos

    Groups including the American Civil Liberties Union, Amnesty International, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Yahoo-owned Tumblr were on the roster of backers of an online protest called The Day We Fight Back

    By mid-morning here, more than 20,000 telephone calls had been made to members of the US Congress to oppose privacy "intrusion" by the National Security Agency, according to Demand Progress executive director David Segal.

    "Winning this fight is going to require a broad coalition of individuals, organisations, and businesses, one that is coalescing around today's activism and will persist until we win the fight against mass suspicion-less surveillance," said Segal, whose Internet freedom organisation claims 1.5m members.

    A The Day We Fight Back website provided simple tools to call or email US legislators, and even provided a script of what to say.

    Links and banners

    Participating websites were to provide links, banners or other tactics to get visitors to barrage members of Congress with Twitter messages, Facebook posts, emails, or calls opposing US online spying.

    Revelations about US surveillance practices at home and abroad have sparked an overdue debate about US surveillance laws and programs, Google vice president of public policy Susan Molinari said in a blog post.

    "Google recognises the very real threats that the US and other countries face, but we strongly believe that government surveillance programs should operate under a legal framework that is rule-bound, narrowly tailored, transparent, and subject to oversight," Molinari said.

    Protest backers hoped to harness the collective power of Internet users to advance a USA Freedom Act that would reform surveillance practices.

    "By overwhelming every member of Congress's phone line, inbox, and Facebook and Twitter accounts with our demand to end government mass surveillance, we can deliver a message impossible to ignore," ACLU legislative counsel Michelle Richardson said in a released statement.

    "The Internet helped kill SOPA and PIPA, now it can roll back the surveillance state by helping to pass the USA Freedom Act," Richardson said.

    Source: AFP via I-Net Bridge

    Source: I-Net Bridge

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