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get a prescription for reglan The second disclosure, called the PRISM program, concerns a still-disputed allegation that the NSA has "direct access" to the servers of Apple, Yahoo, Google, Microsoft, and other companies. Like Verizon, these companies must collect a lot of data to provide basic service. Users of iCloud and Dropbox cloud storage services entrust their photos, documents and videos on Apple and Dropbox servers. Indeed, the whole point of both cloud storage services, neither of which relies on advertising, is to store this very data online. Users of iCloud Mail want all their mail available to them whenever they are online, whether or not those services run ads, meaning the email must be online. Users of Google Maps or Apple Maps must reveal their locations and destinations to use the service at all, whether or not advertising is involved. Every site must still know your IP address to send back the content you want, whether they merely log it or also use the IP address in making advertising decisions. We know now that if data exists, even for a split second, even if never available to advertise, the NSA will attempt to get it.