punti chiave: sovranità territoriale e reciprocità <https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2017/05/21/google-epic-court-fig...> In at least six separate federal cases, Google is waging a quiet war against the U.S. government. It's taking the FBI to task over warrants demanding it hand over the contents of Gmail data stored overseas. And because Google stores customer accounts in fragments in servers around the globe, it's a fight that matters for every email user on the planet, not just non-American Gmail customers. Alongside unsealed cases in California, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, there are at least three other sealed court battles in which Google has claimed the government has no right to use the Stored Communications Act to demand data the firm holds overseas, sources close to firm's legal fight told /Forbes/. That's on top of multiple sealed state cases, they added. Its tussle with the government has emerged after Microsoft won a landmark 2016 case against the U.S. <https://www.forbes.com/sites/insider/2017/05/01/a-cloud-over-the-microsoft-w...>, in which it prevented the FBI from accessing data it stored in Ireland. That came after two appeals and is only legally binding across courts in the Second Circuit, which covers six districts in Connecticut, New York and Vermont. Now, court documents show that Google, backed by some of its biggest rivals from Microsoft to Amazon to Yahoo, is trying to change the state of play across the rest of America, bringing more privacy to users whose information is stored on foreign soil. [...]