>[...] but if the NSA or GCHQ is willing to go to that much trouble just to monitor you, you have bigger problems.
This type of argument contains the assumption that it would be too much trouble for them/not worth it to monitor an affluent anarchist or semi- anti-authortitarian with an above-average IQ.
We've seen that A) their resources are as virtually unlimited as their paranoia B) tech developments have driven down the cost of sophisticated surveilance strategies C) xkeyscore and all of the other releases is confirmation.
This type of argument does us all a disservice by subtly shaming those who care about state-surveilance of private (and peaceful) citizens who value their privacy and/or who exercise their right to actively participate in progressive movements that challenge the establishment.
It also embeds an assumption that someone is targeting you instead of people like you. Compromising the servers of a VPN provider makes plenty of sense in the service of full-take or person-of-interest collection.
We've already seen that the NSA actively targets people searching for privacy tools (e.g. Tails, Tor). The act of using a VPN is mildly interest-provoking, so it's far from crazy to suspect that someone might try to scrape everything happening there in case some of it is interesting.
This type of argument contains the assumption that it would be too much trouble for them/not worth it to monitor an affluent anarchist or semi- anti-authortitarian with an above-average IQ.
We've seen that A) their resources are as virtually unlimited as their paranoia B) tech developments have driven down the cost of sophisticated surveilance strategies C) xkeyscore and all of the other releases is confirmation.
This type of argument does us all a disservice by subtly shaming those who care about state-surveilance of private (and peaceful) citizens who value their privacy and/or who exercise their right to actively participate in progressive movements that challenge the establishment.