The
move to a 1984-style surveillance state seems to be a theme for
today, at least in the anglophone countries
'Of
course they will use pedophiles, criminals and terrorists as their
targets. That is precisely how the official narrative goes everytime:
Say you're going after the bogeyman when you're true hidden agenda is
something else' - comment
‘Like
1984, only worse’: UK may resurrect ‘snooper’s charter’
The
controversial bill dubbed as “a snooper’s charter’, which would
allow the government to track everyone’s email, Internet and cell
phone texts usage, might have new life, today’s Queens’s speech
revealed
RT,
8
May, 2013
.
Proposals
published as a part of the Queen's speech, which kicks off the start
of the new parliamentary year in the UK, confirmed that the
government has been in contact with Internet providers and is still
considering passing new legislation which bears similarity to the
draft Communications Data Bill (CDB) published last year.
"The
Government is committed to ensuring that law enforcement and
intelligence agencies have the powers they need to protect the public
and ensure national security,” Downing Street stated in a
briefing note published alongside the speech.
"Communications
data helps to keep the public safe: it is used by the police to
investigate crimes, bring offenders to justice and save lives."
The
speech noted that the problem of matching Internet Protocol (IP)
addresses to people would be met with government proposals which
would both enable “the protection of the public and the
investigation of crime in cyberspace.”
"The
government is looking at ways of addressing this issue with computer
service providers. It may involve legislation,” the
proposals state.
The
issue at hand refers to collating any given IP address with a
specific individual using it, or in the case of Internet service
providers who use the same IP address for more than one customer,
identifying the correct user, Ben Woods from ZDNet reports.
Currently,
British security services have the power to both identify and locate
who has made a telephone call or sent a text message. However,
Internet communications such as emails, instant messages, and Skype
are identified and stored by their IP address as opposed to
individual users.
The
draft CDB would have required Internet service providers to store web
browsing history, details of messages sent over social media sites,
like Facebook and Twitter and voice calls made over the web. The
legislation stipulated that this information would be retained for a
year, with police being empowered to access it without first asking
permission if they are currently investigating a crime.
Downing
Street was quick to assuage public fears, claiming the new
proposal “is not about indiscriminately accessing internet
data of innocent members of the public, it is about ensuring that
police and other law enforcement agencies have the powers they need
to investigate the activities of criminals that take place online as
well as offline."
In
April, Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg claimed ‘the snoopers’
charter’ would not pass as long as his party was a part of the
coalition government.
"In
other words the idea that the government will pass a law which means
there will be a record kept of every website you visit, who you
communicate with on social media sites, that's not going to happen."
"It's
certainly not going to happen with Liberal Democrats in
government," Clegg vowed.
However,
Clegg has already shown a willingness to accept a watered down
version of the initial draft, having agreed to the language in the
Downing Street briefing note published alongside the Queen’s speech
along with Prime Minister David Cameron.
Home
Secretary Theresa May for her part still hopes to revive the bill in
its totality, having long insisted the measures are necessary for
police to keep pace with terrorists, major criminals and paedophiles
in the digital age.
While
May has long insisted that CDB proposals did not amount to snooping,
Rick Falkvinge, the founder of the Swedish Pirate Party, said the law
by its very definition is about tracking innocent citizens.
"It
doesn't matter what they intend to use the law for. Tracking the
conversations of people who are not under suspicion of a crime is
itself criminal, end of story. It doesn't matter how noble your goals
are,"Falkvinge argues.
He
believes the mass degradation of civil liberties is a matter of
utility, as UK authorities would rather take a shotgun approach to
surveillance rather than systematically identify and target those
suspected of crimes.
“We
have observed the surveillance state remove the requirements for a
warrant to wiretap people. Apparently, it's now too inefficient to
violate people's privacy one by one, so legislators would rather
violate everybody's privacy all the time instead. It's like 1984,
only worse," Falkvinge
continued
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