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Big Brother Britain- The Surveillance State

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By loubeeloo


UK National ID Card

Does anyone else see the irony of the term 'specimen' emblazoned across this card?
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Nowhere to run... nowhere to hide?

UK National Identity Card:

 The Identity Cards Act became law on 30th March 2006.

The Home Office website states that the card...

"will combine the cardholder’s biometric data with their checked and confirmed identity details (...) These identity details and the biometrics will be stored on the national identity register."

The first identity cards were introduced for foreign nationals living in Britain in November 2008 by The Identity and Passport Service. Citizens living in Greater Manchester will be able to apply for an card on a voluntary basis in 2009, and they will become available to the wider population in the North West by early 2010. Cards will be available to the full population from 2012.

However it has been revealed that the government has no intention of providing either the police, customs or job centres with card readers that are essential for reading the data on the implanted chips.... this seems to give further creedence to campaigning organisation no2id's claims, that it is not the cards which are important to the powers that be, but the gathering of the information which will be held on database. They state on their website that recent reports that the scheme will be voluntary are in fact not true:

"From some time in 2011 an application for a passport will mean you must also apply for registration on the National Identity Register — the ID database. You will be said to have 'volunteered'. Once on the Register you will be required to be fingerprinted at your own expense and report yourself to the authorities for life."

There have also been serious concerns raised about the security of information held on both the database & the cards themselves. ENISA have published a report (PDF) in which it has been noted that it is "unknown" if the card has an electronic signature, "unknown" if the primary data on the card could be altered & whether additional data could be written to the card. The UK card scheme was also listed as "unknown" for symmetric key based access control, PIN based access control, certificate based access control and encrypted data transmission.

There have also been claims that the cards are already proven to be re-producable and that the data held on them can be altered- however the Home Office refute this.

Airport workers were affronted at the suggestion they should be the first in the UK to have compulsory ID cards and after much furor the government scrapped the idea... opting instead for an 18 month trail in Manchester and London airports.


They are watching YOU!


Facebook Fascism & Big Brother Bebo...

'Social' Networks used to monitor our movements on behalf of the State: Access to information held on social network sites such as Bebo, Facebook & Myspace have been made available to government agencies such as the police & Scotland Yard, who are being trained to monitor websites without leaving a trace, or revealing their own identities. They are gathering information regarding who people are & creating links to who they associate with, including details such as telephone numbers and street names.

This move is opposed by many people, including by Pete Wishart MP of The Scottish National Party, who has started his own Facbook group about the issue.

The police claim that access to our information will allow them to tackle serious crimes of violence, however this scheme has already lead to one poor man's private BBQ party, being raided after police decided they couldn't let it "go on all night" !

The European Union is spending millions of pounds developing "Orwellian" technologies designed to scour the internet and CCTV images for "abnormal behaviour".

Yes that is right people....Project Indect involves, among others, the Police Service of Northern Ireland (PSNI) and computer scientists at York University. £10 million in funding has been secured from the European Union. It's aim is the development of computer programmes to act as "agents" which will monitor information from web sites, forums, servers, peer-to-peer networks & individual computers. The European Commission is calling for a "common culture" of law enforcement to be developed across the EU.

Liberty (the human rights advocacy agency) has stated that it finds these steps "sinister", especially when they are to be used on such a widely encompassing scale.

The swedish based project named ADABTS (Automatic Detection of Abnormal Behaviour and Threats in Crowded Spaces) has received nearly £3 million in EU taxpayers money. Its partners include the UK Home Office and BAE Systems. It aims to develop models of "suspicious behaviour" so these can be automatically detected using CCTV and other surveillance methods by analysis of the pitch of people's voices and the way their bodies move.

HIDE (Homeland Security, Biometric Identification & Personal Detection Ethics) states on their website that ADABTS...

"aims to facilitate the protection of EU citizens, property and infrastructure against threats of terrorism, crime, and riots."

It is also claimed that...

" The definition of abnormal behaviour... (will be reached)... by extracting characterizations in realistic security settings based on expert classifications and the analysis of CCTV operator behaviour."

The independent think tank, Open Europe, believes intelligence gathered by Indect and other such systems could be used by a secretive & therefore little-known body, the EU Joint Situation Centre (SitCen), which it claims is "effectively the beginning of an EU secret service".

The Home Secretary, Charles Clarke states

"The EU Joint Situation Centre (SitCen) monitors and assesses events and situations worldwide on a 24-hour basis with a focus on potential crisis regions, terrorism and WMD-proliferation... (it)... is divided into three units: the Civilian intelligence Cell (CIC)... the General Operations Unit (GOU)... and the Communications Unit (ComCen)."



UK's National Health Service central database

The National Health Service central database is a controversial plan that would supposedly offer patients "greater control of their medical records" by allowing private companies to store them online. Would you trust the NHS to protect the data and keep it private even though the data flows through a private company?

You can opt out of this scheme. thebigoptout.com details the whys & hows & includes a sample letter to send to your GP. If you do not opt out your records WILL be uploaded to the database anyway!



Have your ID ready:

WARNING!!! 'Spooning' is only allowed for people aged 18 years or over!!!
WARNING!!! 'Spooning' is only allowed for people aged 18 years or over!!!

Politically Correct?....or Population Control?

Supermarkets seem to have jumped in bed with the nanny state (or were they pushed?)...

Recent reports include a woman who was asked to prove she was over 18 in order to buy teaspoons from Asda because "someone had once been murdered with one" according to the diligent cashier... this is the same company who earlier this year branded a litre of their own-brand milk with the warning: ‘Contains Milk’.

...and of course there was the case of the paramedic who was refused service by Tesco twice in one visit... firstly because it is "the store's policy not to sell alcohol to people wearing uniform"... then a while later because he'd re-enterd the shop to purchase his bottle of wine wearing only his thong and pair of socks.He is also likely to face disciplinary action by the NHS trust he is employed by & had been "spoken to by his superiors" at the time of the reports.


Taking Liberties- Irreverent but revelatory, outrageous but true!

Taking Liberties

Find out about how our civil liberties & human rights are gradually being eroded without our knowledge & what this means for all of us in this interactive presentation, hosted by the British Library... Then watch a hilarious but thought provoking film of the same title, which illustrates that despite these issues not being widely publicised in the media, these erosions of rights are adversely effecting all of us NOW!

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mick rick frank  says:
2 months ago

THE PERFECT PRISON

There is a quiet, dark revolution underway in Britain. It was happening yesterday, it's happening now - this minute. It will continue to happen tomorrow.

Without anyone really noticing it we are becoming a police state. We're not quite there yet - it's a long way down to the real depths of secret police, social control, monitored movements - but we're blindly sleepwalking that path.

George Orwell's 1984 portrays a country plunged into totalitarianism. The state is locked in an endless war that, although somehow affecting no one directly, functions as a perfect mechanism for inducing fear and justifying the destruction of basic liberties.

Crucially there is mass surveillance. This is the key: an essential element for a true police state is that everyone should be monitored, at all times. Or they must at least believe this is happening. In 1984 everyone is watched, intrusively. Privacy has all but evaporated, the word itself ceasing to have meaning. Everywhere, fear.

Without getting hysterical, without too much hyperbole, there are clear parallels to modern day Britain.

Since September 11 we have been at war with an enemy - "terror" - that by many of our actions we are empowering. The stage is now set for a generations long conflict that can never be, in any real sense, won. In order to fight this war, basic liberties are eroded: long imprisonment without trial, without charge becomes legal. Evidence gained from torture is suddenly admissible in a court of law. Foreign intelligence services carry out extraordinary renditions through British airspace and soil, with the connivance of the government.

And, there is mass surveillance.

CCTV camera and tracking technologies have proliferated. Not so many years ago such cameras - let's call them spy cameras; that is after all what they are doing - were limited to spaces like garage forecourts. They were ineffective things, recoding largely useless, indistinct time-lapse photos onto VHS tapes. Endless hours of drivers filling-up their cars and walking in to pay. Perhaps the occasional robbery, caught on film, to show on 'CrimeWatch' because the police cannot catch the suspect.

Cut to the present day: cameras are, almost literally, everywhere. They are in shops, they're in bars and clubs, they are high on gantries over the roads, at traffic lights they are watching the high street. They are watching and recording you as you go about the most banal tasks.

The technology is still in relative infancy but has already developed far beyond those scratchy VHS tapes. Face recognition software and high-resolution optics mean your movements can be traced, your facial expressions logged: Your speed and trajectories measured: Your number plate inscribed onto a computer database. You went shopping this afternoon, parked in the Main Street carpark, brought some underwear on a credit card and then went home? Yes ma'am, we know all that. It's all there, on our hard drive. You met a woman who is not your wife for the fifth time in two weeks, she always wearing a long black skirt, you a gray suit? We know that sir, it was picked up by our cameras and noted by the computer engineer when he ran some tests on a face recognition software.

This monitoring started out as a deterrent against crime and, as such, how could any of us object? Don't you want to be safe?

Local councils across the country approved more and more projects that promised to smash yob culture. They secured some central government funds, raised cash from local businesses. Sinister words like surveillance, like police state were never mentioned, potential human rights implications pushed aside: The cameras would make us safer by allowing the police to catch criminals, to safeguard the elderly. Don't you want the elderly to be safe?

And then we are at war with terror and we're more afraid than ever. It's not that a teenager is going to snatch your purse outside the bank; that's a quaint fear from happier times. Now it's suicide bombers on the bus.

More cameras, better monitoring will help save us. How can we object?

The technology was put in place, the network established and it does have benefits. It can, perhaps, add to our security. It can help police build a case against homicidal fanatics. Perhaps it will even help reduce a crime rate that has, thus far, shown no signs of actually being reduced.

Yet there is a price to pay. We have, unwittingly, put in place the building blocks of a police state; the ability to know where citizens are and, with some high degree of accuracy, what they are doing. When privacy ceases to exist, so in a real sense does freedom. To stop the criminals we are now all monitored as if we are potential criminals. The bag-snatcher is in the database of images as he runs from his victim.. So are you, as you carry the weekly shop to your car.

*

In the late 18th Century a British philosopher designed the perfect prison. The man was Jeremy Bentham, the prison known as a Panopticon. It was a study in architecture, a building to be constructed in such a way that an observer could watch prisoners without them knowing if they were, at any moment, actually being watched. Perhaps the observer is writing down their every action. Or perhaps the observer is asleep.

The prisoner would never know and so, the prisoner would have to assume they were being watched at all times. Bentham envisioned it as a way of creating an omniescent observer: a God in command of all the prisoners, a permanent presence. Big Brother.

In his words, the Panoptican would be: "a new mode of obtaining power of mind over mind, in a quantity hitherto without example."

The emaciated prisoner would internalise this gaze, and learn to behave in the way he was expected to behave by the observing power. He would become his own prison guard, his own re-educator. His own Big Brother.

Bentham was a liberal, a reformer. He designed the prison for peoples own good.It was not driven by impure motives but a desire to save the dregs of society. But his project was to be confined in space: it was a physical building outside of which the gaze of the observer failed. It had clear limits.

In modern, CCTV Britain, a Panoptican is being created and it has fewer boundaries. It has been established in our public spaces. In certain towns, certain cities it is more complete than you perhaps imagine. The observer could be watching you almost everywhere. We are becoming a perfect prison.

*

It is just about possible to argue that none of this matters, if we trust absolutely that the authorities controlling it all never, ever abuse their incredible powers. If the government, security apparatus and judiciary stick absolutely to the rule of law, if they uphold the rights of the individual with just zeal. If they ensure there are no illiberal erosions to these basic, sacred rights.

And that's the problem. Authorities rarely, if ever behave that way for long. They certainly do not behave that way automatically but by continued debate, argument, contest.

Especially in times of war, the instinct of authority is to retreat, to shut down and to restrict. This is already happening: traditional laws are suspended - on the grounds of a vague, nefarious threat to the nation - and along with them are suspended our collective moral decency. Our preciously, democratically elected government starts to behave more and more like a Stalinist dictatorship. They all have national emergencies too; that's why the reformers disappear, that's why the military tribunals meet in private to hand out sentences that cannot be appealed.

We take another step down that ladder, another step into the darkness.

With the CCTV and surveillance technology now already out and on the streets, the mechanism is there for the state to take further control of our lives. It may start with monitoring terrorist suspects but where does it end? Can we trust our leaders, our parliaments - those that have failed us so dramatically over simple, vital matters of war and peace - to ensure this all goes so far but no further? Will we

loubeeloo profile image

loubeeloo  says:
2 months ago

Thank you 'Mick Frank Rick'.

Please feel free to keep adding your thoughts on this subject... your input is welcomed & most respected. xx

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