As concerns over the Trump administration's alignment with Big Tech grow, individuals are considering moving their digital lives to overseas services. Law enforcement requests allow tech companies like Apple, Google, and Meta to control access to personal data, raising questions about privacy and civil liberties. In response to the Trump administration, Meta made policy changes that allowed hate speech and diminished fact-checking. Many Americans now view US-based digital services as increasingly unsafe, prompting discussions of becoming 'digital expats' and highlighting the urgency of these privacy issues.
Americans concerned about the Trump administration and Silicon Valley's embrace of it may consider becoming a 'digital expat'-moving your digital life off of US-based systems.
The companies with the most insight into our lives, movements, and communications are frontline arbiters of our constitutional rights and the rights of non-US citizens.
Cozying up to the Trump administration, Meta-owned platforms shifted policies to align with new values, enabling hate speech and abandoning fact-checking.
Law enforcement requests for user data mean these tech companies can control access to our personal information, raising urgent privacy and civil liberty concerns.
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