UK: Home Office looking to create national database with details of every phone call made and email sent
Posted on May 21st, 2008 by bile Categories and Tags: Uncategorized, bureaucracy, censorship, Chris Huhne, communications data, crime, crucial tool, David Davis, debate, fascism, freedom, Home Office, Information Commission, internet records, Jonathan Bamford, liberty, police state, politics, privacy, The Times, UK, United Kingdom, your rightsMinisters are to consider plans for a database of electronic information holding details of every phone call and e-mail sent in the UK, it has emerged.The plans, reported in the Times, are at an early stage and may be included in the draft Communications Bill later this year, the Home Office confirmed.
A Home Office spokesman said the data was a “crucial tool” for protecting national security and preventing crime.
Ministers have not seen the plans which were drawn up by Home Office officials.
A Home Office spokesman said: “The Communications Data Bill will help ensure that crucial capabilities in the use of communications data for counter-terrorism and investigation of crime continue to be available.
“These powers will continue to be subject to strict safeguards to ensure the right balance between privacy and protecting the public.”
The spokesman said changes need to be made to the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 “to ensure that public authorities can continue to obtain and have access to communications data essential for counter-terrorism and investigation of crime purposes”.
But the Information Commission, an independent authority set up to protect personal information, said the database “may well be a step too far” and highlighted the risk of data being lost, traded or stolen.
Assistant information commissioner Jonathan Bamford said: “We are not aware of any justification for the state to hold every UK citizen’s phone and internet records. We have real doubts that such a measure can be justified, or is proportionate or desirable.
“Defeating crime and terrorism is of the utmost importance, but we are not aware of any pressing need to justify the government itself holding this sort of data.”
A number of data protection failures in recent months, including the loss of a CD carrying the personal details of every child benefit claimant, have embarrassed the government.
The plans also prompted concern from political groups.
The shadow home secretary, David Davis, said: “Given [ministers'] appalling record at maintaining the integrity of databases holding people’s sensitive data, this could well be more of a threat to our security than a support.”
Liberal Democrat home affairs spokesman Chris Huhne called the proposals “an Orwellian step too far”.
He said ministers had “taken leave of their senses if they think that this proposal is compatible with a free country and a free people”.
And having millions of CCTV cameras are? Tracking people as they walk and drive around? Forcibly extracting DNA samples from people and keeping it on file even after they are found innocent? This guy acts as if this is anymore than a matter of degrees.
“Given the appalling track record of data loss, this state is simply not to be trusted with such private information,” said Mr Huhne.
Yes because that alone is the reason we shouldn’t be handing over all our communications to the monopoly on violence? How about the whole innocent before proven guilty idea we once had?
What scares me is the lack of outrage and the ease at which their version of Homeland Security advocates spying on their entire population. People in those positions of power should not be using 1984 as a roadmap. I think as the government grows in this way one of the responses is going to have to be infiltration of those who develop these systems and sabotaging them. A WMRN database would be far more palatable.
3 Responses to “UK: Home Office looking to create national database with details of every phone call made and email sent”
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May 21st, 2008 at 7:00 am
I am so sick of hearing about that book.
May 21st, 2008 at 7:03 am
I’m sick of of hearing about it be implemented.
If you’ve got a well known police state dystopia fiction I can reference you’re welcome to suggest it. I can use Nazi Germany, Mao China, Stalin USSR, etc if possible if you’d like.
August 20th, 2008 at 9:19 am
[...] reported on this in May. Doesn’t look like much has really changed but it seems that there has been some outrage over [...]