 David Spark reporting for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. I am here at the RSA conference in San Francisco. It's a conference all about security. The new political powers are now breeding a lot of uncertainty. Will it affect how we approach privacy and security? What do you think the Trump administration is going to do to protect your digital privacy? Nothing. Nothing. I don't think they're going to do anything. Yeah, I don't think he's going to do very much at all. I don't think they're knowledgeable enough on the subject to actually be able to do anything other than take away from it. I don't know, but whatever it is, they're going to charge for it. Who does Trump represent? Businesses. Businesses want my information. It's their model, right? Advertising dollars, the more they know, the more money to be made. I think they're going to lean toward what is good for corporations, what is good for the security state. That's going to take precedent over what's good for the individual. What do you think the Trump administration is going to do to protect your digital privacy? Not much. I expect Donald Trump to cough up pretty much any private information in any random press conference or maybe in a tweet an hour from now. I think Trump, as far as he's concerned, it's all public and if he can get better intelligence, he's going to take everything we got. I think that's the last thing as mine. He's got enough things that he's worried about right now that seem to be very self-focused and so I don't think he's going to care about others yet. I don't imagine he's going to do anything, but I don't imagine he's going to do anything much worse than his predecessors. I don't think that any administration from any party has any interest in protecting privacy. This is all about data acquisition because he who controls the data has the power. I'm a good person, right? Do you think I'm a good person? Should I be tracked but not you? Is that the idea? I don't count on anybody but myself to protect my privacy because the government, there's no motive for them to protect my privacy because all information is of value to them. Don't you think he's going to make the internet great again? The internet has always been great.