I fail to see how plug is anti-PRISM.<p>All your devices need to install plugs software, at which point you provide a login and a password, and <i>bam</i>, you now have full access to your files connected to your plug...<p>what?<p>So we go out and contact plugs central server, provide a username and password, and now we have remote access to all our files.<p>ALL of them. Plug syncs everything.<p>PRISM, the program that secretly told internet service companies to provide access and tell no one. and plug, the device that makes every single file you have visible on a network connection that they hold the keys to.<p>Plug is going to have to go a long way to convince me that they can't be compelled to release my credentials to a government authority, even if they said they never would and they really really meant it, that still means they have complete and total access to my life.<p>Anti-PRISM here isn't meaningless, it's outright wrong. Your product is only anti-PRISM if your product assumes the author can't be trusted in addition to not trusting the lines the data is sent on (At least they did that).