Technology | National Security Agency How to Block NSA Spying Timothy B. Lee offers up 5 ideas By Evann Gastaldo Posted Jun 10, 2013 1:45 PM CDT Copied (Shutterstock) Don't like the idea of the NSA spying on your phone calls and emails? In the Washington Post, Timothy B. Lee offers five ways for you to protect yourself: Tor: This Internet browser lets you remain anonymous, and does not reveal your IP address or other identifiers. One fan: NSA whistleblower himself, Edward Snowden. Silent Circle: This Internet phone app is thought to be "impervious to wiretapping, even by the NSA," Lee writes. OTR: Even your chat logs may be available to the NSA via PRISM, but if you use this chat extension (its name is short for "off the record"), the server will only see an encrypted version of your chat. One caveat: Both chatters need to be using software that supports OTR. Click for Lee's complete list. (Or, if you want to anonymously leak to the media, check out a how-to guide.) Read These Next Online boo-bears go after the demo firm tearing White House apart. President Monroe's daughter wrote a desperate plea in 1839. Plane windshield partially shatters mid-flight. There's a suspect. 'Butt-breathing' could be the future for struggling patients. Report an error