I'm all for resources for people looking for alternatives, but I think there are some flaws with the way this is presented.<p>The whole first section is a bunch of scary stuff that in the end is not really a great way to select products, at least in my personal opinion. If you are worried about nation-state spying you aren't going to use <i>any</i> cloud services, and you shouldn't take a company's location as any sort of reasonable way to protect yourself if you are truly on that level of tin foil hat.<p>> If the company has servers, offices, or employees in the US, it can be legally forced to hand over your data to the US government.<p>Yeah, <i>including many of the alternatives </i>that are on this list.*<p>I also think a lot of the alternatives have their own flaws.<p>- Alternatives that are listed with "Strong privacy laws, GDPR applies." Well, the GDPR applies to any user in the EU using a product made by a US-based tech company. So choosing a company solely for GDPR coverage isn't really a particularly good reason to choose it.<p>- Alternatives like Opera and Deepseek have offices in China which for many people concerned about state surveillance isn't exactly an upgrade.<p>- Some alternatives on the list have US servers and US ownership, like Tidal (owned by Block (Square), a US company).