
waited too much to read here... so I fear I'll go off topic, as the discussion evolved a bit since the 1st post...
Anyway...
What's funny is how quickly you can get used to not having privacy.
Even much more funny

is how quickly you can get used not having rights, in general, so i.e. right to your own privacy or to have choices or whatever even if these seemed to be 'established' rights 'til a few years ago.
Otherwise people'd perhaps be able to answer and, I don't know, to perhaps find ways to invalidate spying programs' results with false or totally useless data… or not. I don't know. But I prefer to think that if people knew and wanted to, then, would be able to.
And, another thing… the reason is simply a silly lie to me, I mean:
I don't think being safe from terrorism or somehow ensure a greater "would-be-safety" is worth the freedom that's being given up in the process.
Safety to me is not actually a reason to anything here but a simple pretext to allow generalized control… essentially I can't see nothing for real linked to safety.
… but I'm probably paranoid

as, to be honest, I also have so many doubts even on what terrorism really is, because to me, afterall, it looks like the new welcome fear, after the old cold war's fear was gone… so, yep, paranoid perhaps, but after all I think it might happen and it's not totally wrong when you have to deal with people or governments or companies or whatever which so seldom play fairly...