











































































































browsers
Firefox
messengers
Jappix - Thunderbird
search
Duckduckgo - Quaero - Scroogle
servers
all2all - domaine public - Telekommunisten
networks
Appleseed - Crabgrass - Diaspora - elgg - OneSocialWeb - pip.io
microblog
identi.ca
RELATED SITES
Act on ACTA - ACTA FFII - Actual Facebook Graph Searches - American Censorship Day - Anonymat - Arts numériques - Big Brother Inc - Big Brother Awards - Big Brother Watch - biometrie-online.net - Bits of Freedom - Blocked on Weibo - BugBrother - Citizen Lab - Collectif de Réappropriation de l’Espace Public (CREP) - Constantvzw - Consumer Watchdog - Data Liberation - DataLossdb - Domaine Public - europe-v-facebook.org - Foundation for a Free Information Infrastructure - Freedom not Fear - G8 vs INTERNET - Google Spleen - Human Rights Watch - Internet Sans Frontières - Inside Google - Libertés surveillées - LobbyPlag - Loss of Privacy - lyon.sous-surveillance.net - Naked Citizens - No-CCTV - NURPA - Open Rights Group - Ordinateurs de Vote - our-policy.org - OWNIlive - Paris sous surveillance
- PHIprivacy - Pièces et Main d’Oeuvre - Police spies out of lives - Privacy Camp - Privacy International - Privacy Online - La Quadrature du Net - Reflets - Les renseignements généreux - Souriez vous êtes filmés - Spyfiles - Stop The Cyborgs - Stop the Internet Blacklist ! - Telekommunisten - Terms of Service ; Didn’t Read - Tor - traiteacta.com - Unlike Us - Web Action Now - What The Internet Knows About You
Defying a veto threat from President Obama, the House on Thursday passed a bill that encourages intelligence agencies and businesses to share information about threats to computer systems, including attacks on American Web sites by hackers in China and other countries.
The vote was 248 to 168, as 42 Democrats joined 206 Republicans in backing the bill. The “no” votes were cast by 140 Democrats and 28 Republicans, including a number who described the measure as a potential threat to privacy (...)