Jacqui Smith has set out plans to give the police and security services more powers to gather phone and e-mail data.
But wait:
"I want this to be combined with a well-informed debate characterised by openness, rather than mere opinion, by reason and reasonableness," she told the IPPR.
Well, that's alright, then. Except:
"What we will be proposing will be options which follow the key principles which govern all our work in this area - the principles of proportionality and necessity."
What, like ID cards, you mean?
Note, too, that when she says this:
"There are no plans for an enormous database which will contain the content of your emails, the texts that you send or the chats you have on the phone or online."
There is also this:
Plans to collect more data on people's phone, e-mail and web-browsing habits are expected to be included in the Communications Data Bill, due to be introduced in the Queen's Speech in November.
Which, assuming it's correct, means that "web-browsing habits" - IP addresses et al. - *would* be stored, which are potentially even more incriminating that email, texts or chats....
No comments:
Post a Comment