Much of the U.S. media coverage of the NSA revelations has concentrated on its impact on the constitutional rights of U.S. Internet users. But what about the billions of Internet users around the world whose private information is stored in U.S. servers, or whose data travels across U.S. networks? 

Below, we're publishing a series of articles looking into how the information disclosed in the NSA leaks affect the international community and how they highlight one part of an international system of surveillance that dissolves what national privacy protections any of us have, whereever we live. The Spies Without Borders series is a joint project with CIPPICYou can follow the Spies Without Borders series by subscribing to EFF on Twitteridenti.caFacebookGoogle Plus or at openmedia.ca

Spies Without Borders Series

  1. International Customers: It's Time to Call on US Internet Companies to Demand Accountability and Transparency 
  2. Using Domestic Networks to Spy on the World
  3. U.S. Foreign Intelligence: From Carte Blanche Surveillance to Weak [Domestic] Protections
  4. An International Perspective on FISA: No Protections, Little Oversight
  5. Universal, Self-Evident: I'm Not American but I Have Privacy Rights too, NSA
  6. Spying on the World From Domestic Soil - International Backlash
  7. Global Dialogue on Governmental Extra-Territorial Surveillance
  8. NSA Leaks Prompt Surveillance Dialogue in India