Actually, what you can't do is expose that data to the Internet, period, if you're attempting to be consistent with your, "NSA spying is causing me problems" viewpoint, because the NSA is monitoring network traffic around the globe, and decrypting what it can and storing what it can't.
So, if you're going to be internally consistent, you're going to have to delete all digital copies of all "sensitive" data, lest you yourself get hacked.
Or you could accept that with all operations there exists risk, and attempt to mitigate that risk using methods which are consistent between one another.
Not using US products gets you nowhere, in other words.
So, if you're going to be internally consistent, you're going to have to delete all digital copies of all "sensitive" data, lest you yourself get hacked.
Or you could accept that with all operations there exists risk, and attempt to mitigate that risk using methods which are consistent between one another.
Not using US products gets you nowhere, in other words.