Boiling a frog - or the slow march of authoritarianism

October 3rd, 2007 tristan Posted in privacy, surveillance society No Comments »

Ross Anderson a security researcher a Cambridge Univerity’s Computer Lab certainly has a nack for coming up with good ways to describe security and privacy issues. He invented the term “programming Satan’s machine” to describe creating secure computer systems.

He hits the right note again, describing the slow creep towards a surveillance state as being like boiling a frog - if you increase the heat quickly it jumps out, but if you increase the temperature slowly it gets used to it and stays in the water, eventually dying.
The same is what is happening to our privacy and with it our freedom.

Governments all over the world are slowly increasing the level of surveillance of the general population, aided by fear of terrorism (promoted by governments) and increasingly fear over environmental damage. In this walk, Britain is leading the way amongst the ‘free world’ with China leading the way in the rest of the world.

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Latest attempt to catalogue the population

August 2nd, 2007 tristan Posted in dna database, surveillance society No Comments »

Is reporter in The Register.

The police are now requesting the power to take DNA samples from people suspected of non-recordable offenses. These are offenses such as speeding or dropping litter.

Obviously this is to help fishing expeditions rather than police work to solve cases.

There will be some sort of consultation which “will be involving a small, group of ordinary people who will consider social and ethical issues involved in the current and future use of DNA for forensic purposes”. I suppose that’s what democracy means, letting a small group of people make decisions which effect the rest of the country…

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