The government provides a series of nontransferable rights to each American citizen to protect them from the power of the government. We can not break these rights, but the government violates the fourth revision daily, trying to monitor the American citizens by preventing terrorism. In 2007, President Obama said the US government's "civil liberty infringement is a way to strengthen our securities - this is not a fact." Americans need to understand that their privacy is worth it.
In the privacy coin, ZCash ($ ZEC) is currently most respected from the technical point of view. Edward Snowden said their privacy technology is safe, Naval Ravikant is interested in this (but not only), and Vitalik Butertin said ZCash's basic technology is currently growing rapidly .. JPMorgan integrated the block chain project. Each country is interested in block chain technology and can integrate services. Many potential use cases are included: secure storage of sensitive information, civil rights and social security management, treaties written in smart contracts, and why not through block chain governance? It even happens earlier than expected
On June 6, 2013, Edward Snowden provided the public with details of the National Security Agency (NSA) surveillance activities, causing Americans to worry about their privacy. In the interview, Edward Snowden, a former employee of the National Security Agency, provides very detailed information on how NSA accessed e-mail, telephone, Internet activity, and other technology related content did. - "All is okay as it is far from the hands of the author", "All goes to the hands of humans" (Rousseau Emile, Book 1) Everyone is basically kind to mankind's birth and manipulation of man and perfect damage. Rousseau's statements on the basic strengths of human nature and cultivation of corruption are reflected in the novel "Mary" of Mary Worth Craft.
The disclosure by Edward Snowden, whistleblower of the US National Security Agency, changed the global dialogue on privacy and security. According to last autumn's research by Pew, most US Internet users are currently attempting to take measures to make their computers safer and to keep private information more secret. It is difficult to exaggerate how persuasive this is (I wrote the whole column in December). Due to the history of the entire technology industry, the consumer's demand for security and privacy is not obvious. There is no reason to believe that using money to make the product safer will be converted to new users enough to pay for the extra engineering work it requires.