Saturday, August 23, 2008

European Privacy? More Like European Invasion of Privacy...

OhMyNews recently reported that the U.K., along with other European powers, are developing a system to spy on cell phone records, including text and calls, as well as Internet searches.

The British government wants to invade privacy by storing records in a database so that hundreds of public organizations can access this information as needed. The cell phone, text message, and Internet records will be used to investigate criminal and terrorist acts. The records will be kept at the data center for at least 12 months. Dates, times, and contacts (from cell phones) will be stored, while searches and instant message conversations will be tracked and recorded as well. The only bright side is that, supposedly, the content will not be stored just the identifying information.

The cost for transferring the massive amount of data--a mere 50 million pounds per year. It must be worth it to the surveillance-obsessed nation that already monitors citizens through CCTV. 1984 anyone? One spy camera for every fourteen people wasn't bad enough, now forget about protecting personal information or any type of Internet privacy.

I can't see any benefit in this. The U.K. is making it seem like every citizen is guilty and will be treated accordingly. What will the exact laws be concerning the use, or better yet misuse, of information? How secure will this database be? We could end up having another situation, much like what happened in Sarasota, but on a much larger scale--imagine millions of people having their information posted on the Internet.

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