From what I understand, right to private family life, home and correspondence (also known as article 8 of European Convention of Human Rights) is not a part of the US constitution per se (and yet you have a provision for owning guns. Doesn't that strike you as weird?). I'm sure there are other legal provisions that more or less fix that but it also means that NSA has an easier job building a legal framework that overrides this right. I.e. they get to spy on you in a completely legal manner and you don't get to complain.
With other, less... mad countries, there's a limited amount of what agencies equivalent to NSA can do. Sure, GCHQ gets to monitor phone calss and such and such but spying on someone looking at porn would get the UK into a whole lot of trouble with Strasbourg.
So legally, no. There isn't much that you can do with NSA. Which is unfortunate and especially infuriating given the US's tendency to stick their nose outside their jurisdiction - like issuing extradition orders on British students that break US law while A> being physically located in the UK and B> not breaking UK law. Yeah. That sort of thing happens.
Now I don't mean to sound harsh and let me say that I fully sympathise with the US citizens. I just think that their government's domestic and foreign policies are in a dire need of a revision. Case in point: NSA.
With other, less... mad countries, there's a limited amount of what agencies equivalent to NSA can do. Sure, GCHQ gets to monitor phone calss and such and such but spying on someone looking at porn would get the UK into a whole lot of trouble with Strasbourg.
So legally, no. There isn't much that you can do with NSA. Which is unfortunate and especially infuriating given the US's tendency to stick their nose outside their jurisdiction - like issuing extradition orders on British students that break US law while A> being physically located in the UK and B> not breaking UK law. Yeah. That sort of thing happens.
Now I don't mean to sound harsh and let me say that I fully sympathise with the US citizens. I just think that their government's domestic and foreign policies are in a dire need of a revision. Case in point: NSA.