Good. Money talks more than moral outrage ever will, however justified. The only way it will stop is if enough companies with money (read: tech companies) tell the government that these policies are destroying their business and hence damaging the US economy.
We base a great deal of our foreign policy on corporate interests anyway, the obvious solution here is to make corporate interests overlap with our righteous indignation at government snooping.
I'm not yet grasping what it means. I'm a lone developer targetting a B2B ecosystem made of 75% US, 15% EU. As far as I understand, the following activities are now forbidden. If so, that's the strongest protectionism that EU startups could ever dream of...
- Emailing my EU customers using MailChimp,
- Pasting my EU customer data in a Google Spreadsheet,
>If so, that's the strongest protectionism that EU startups could ever dream of...
Sure, if you show me viable EU based alternatives to the services you mentioned.
As a EU based developer I, too, am cooking with water - means I manage my mailing lists with MailChimp, use Google Apps for Email, use AWS, etc. There are just no EU based alternatives to these services.
As usual when it comes to internet regulation by the EU: it's not really favourable for EU based companies (except the few ex state monopolists).
Meanwhile, the EU countries have spying regimes of their own that are just as intrusive. They want EU citizen data on-shore so they can spy on it, not so that the US cannot. They've become the Iron Curtain. I'm not even certain I can blame the NSA. The Europeans have voted technological totalitarianism in. The EU Cookie law predates Snowden, and was a mild precursor of failures to come.
The real problem is that even if the US passes a law that EU citizen data is out of reach for the NSA the "backdoor" known as GCHQ still exists.
Any form of true protection of EU citizen data requires throwing out the Brits. I personally hope that we won't have to kick them out because they will exit the EU out on their own for good.
The Fourteen Eyes consist of the Five Eyes plus Denmark, France, the Netherlands, Norway, Germany, Belgium, Italy, Spain and Sweden. According to a document leaked by Edward Snowden, the Fourteen Eyes are officially known as SIGINT Seniors Europe, or "SSEUR".
There are 28 countries in the EU. Some countries among the 14 Eyes might even have elected leaders who are interested in having real autonomy and confidentiality in strategic government and industry areas, and would prefer not to have that leak out through an interlinked deep state.
I wonder if that prospect might not form enough of a threat that national governments might finally have the gumption to rein in their intelligence services.
When there's an ongoing major story, we downweight follow-up posts (ones that don't contain significant new information) as quasi-dupes. Otherwise the front page tends to fill up with copycat articles. This is the lesson we learned from l'affaire Snowden of 2013.
(p.s. I only saw this by accident. If you want to make sure that we see something, please email hn@ycombinator.com. We can't read all the HN comments but we do read all the emails.)
Interesting that you don't see this post as containing significant new information. The Business Insider article had only the briefest of mentions of the NSA, and nothing about the political consequences, and doesn't have any perspectives from US privacy and civil liberties organizations. The EFF unsurprisingly gives more context on all of these aspects. So the net result is a textbook example of Hacker News' "objective" policies penalizing alternate perspectives.
There's a fallacy here (what's its name? maybe just sample bias?) where you're assuming that we've analyzed this as closely as you have, therefore must be making as precise a judgment as you, therefore must have an opposite agenda to you, therefore must have a hidden opposite agenda to you.
But that's not how HN moderation works. In reality it's probabilistic: all we do all day is guess. There's no hope of reading every story closely and making precise calls. Not even close!
If you'd do what other users (including other users who feel strongly about mass surveillance) do—consider the tradeoffs and help clarify which stories are best by HN's standards—you'll get better results than accusing us of sinister silencing.
I don't think he's accusing you of anything sinister. To me, it sounds like he's saying "here is the result of your policy". It's almost as if you're both saying the same thing :).
It still amazes me how easy it is to misread these things—invariably because one has a pre-existing picture that the new data snaps into. Sorry for making a wrong assumption.
We base a great deal of our foreign policy on corporate interests anyway, the obvious solution here is to make corporate interests overlap with our righteous indignation at government snooping.