2 posts tagged “uk”
A video which puts together some of the questions many of us have been asking about the real perpetrators of 'terrorist attacks' and the real implications of the so-called 'War on Terror.
UK Rolls Out Police Headcams
The following is an article from O'Reilly Radar:
It's been a while since I've written about the coming surveillance society, but I couldn't let an AP story in today's newspaper about British policemen equipped with helmet cams go by without comment.
By providing dramatic footage of victims, suspects and witnesses, judges and jurors will be able to ``see and hear the incident through the eyes and ears of the officer at the scene,'' Minister of State for Security Tony McNulty said.
Given various incidents of police brutality, you can see the additional upside that police might be more restrained if they knew someone was watching -- or they might just turn off the camera. The story also cites rowdy crowds quieting down when they realized they were being filmed, women having more confidence in pressing charges in domestic abuse cases, and so on. But, the article continues:
the national rollout will tighten Britain's web of video surveillance, already the most extensive in the world. The country is watched over by a network of some 4 million closed-circuit cameras, and privacy advocates complain the average Briton is recorded as many as 300 times a day.
and
The Home Office said it was exploring other uses for the devices, including fitting them with the ability to send video live to a command centre, or special license-plate recognition software which would enable police to identify stolen or suspicious vehicles just by looking at them.
The future is not going to be like the past. We can rush unthinking towards that future, or we can make conscious choices about what kind of future we want. There are trends too strong for any of us to stop, in which case we must think hard about how best to adapt. There are others where a small intervention at the right time can make all the difference. We can also set in place guidelines to mitigate harm. For example, in the case of the police headcams, "police were instructed to inform members of the public they were being recorded and that the footage not being used in an investigation had to be erased within a month of its creation" and
The Home Office said the cameras — which have enough memory to hold 24 hours of video — were not intended to record continuously. Officers would turn the devices on and off at their discretion, speaking into the camera after turning it on to explain where, when and why they were starting it. A second explanation was required before turning the device off.
The report also cautioned against taking extraneous video when entering private homes, and said officers should turn cameras off during strip searches. But it also threatened disciplinary action against officers who deliberately masked the camera's view or deleted video from the camera's memory.
How do you feel about a future in which you might always be on camera in any public space? What kinds of safeguards would you expect?
From: O'Reilly Radar
As for my comments? Well, I'm not at all surprised about the police in the UK searching for ever more ways of spying on the general public and that they receive backing and encouragement from the UK Government. This is just one more example of the takeover of UK citizens' rights, privacy and lives.
And for those that would answer: "what's there to worry about if you've got nothing to hide?", I would say that you may not think you have anything to hide, until someone decides otherwise.
I go back to the UK quite often and each time I go back there are new 'rules' in place. It saddens me. Britain used to pride itself (whether justified or not) on its 'free and open' society. The last 28 years have changed all that. Little by little all peoples rights have been stripped away. And under this Government events have escalated so that no one feels safe to say or do anything anymore.
Children in school still learn about the rise of Nazism in 1930's Germany, but few British people actually notice the resemblance between this and what is happening in Britain today and of those that do, most ask, "But what can we do about it anyway?"
I don't know, but I would say recognising what is happening and then thinking about what could be done (rather than what 'cannot be done') would be a start.
The whole situation makes me sad and very angry. For me, I am glad we got out, but for my family still living in the UK, I despair.