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MPs probe 'surveillance society' | MPs probe 'surveillance society' |
(about 4 hours later) | |
An inquiry into the growing use of surveillance in society is to be held by an influential committee of MPs. | An inquiry into the growing use of surveillance in society is to be held by an influential committee of MPs. |
The Commons Home Affairs committee is about to announce the inquiry, leader of the Commons Jack Straw told MPs. | The Commons Home Affairs committee is about to announce the inquiry, leader of the Commons Jack Straw told MPs. |
The Information Commissioner last year warned the UK risked "sleep-walking into a surveillance society". | The Information Commissioner last year warned the UK risked "sleep-walking into a surveillance society". |
It is thought the inquiry will include the impact of identity cards, the expansion of the DNA database and the large rise in the use of CCTV cameras. | It is thought the inquiry will include the impact of identity cards, the expansion of the DNA database and the large rise in the use of CCTV cameras. |
Shadow home secretary David Davis said the move was welcome, adding: "Under Labour we have progressively moved towards a surveillance society with the government's obsession with ID cards and the DNA database being just two examples. | |
'Extremely sinister' | |
"What is extremely sinister however is that Labour refuses to be straight about their intentions." | |
There are up to 4.2m CCTV cameras in Britain - about one for every 14 people. | |
The UK also holds 3.6 million DNA samples - the world's biggest database. | |
We've got to say where do we want the lines to be drawn? Information Commissioner Richard Thomas | |
But research published in November revealed other types of surveillance, from "dataveillance" - the use of information from credit cards, mobile phones and loyalty cards - to US security agencies monitoring telecommunications. | |
An author of the report, by a group of academics called the Surveillance Studies network, said the UK was "the most surveilled country" of all the industrialised Western states. | |
It coincided with a publication by the human rights group Privacy International suggesting Britain is the worst Western democracy at protecting individual privacy | |
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas said concerns he had raised two years previously, had become a reality. | |
"We've got to say where do we want the lines to be drawn? How much do we want to have surveillance changing the nature of society in a democratic nation?," he told the BBC. | |
At the time a spokesman for the Department for Constitutional Affairs (DCA) said there needed to be a balance between sharing information responsibly and respecting the citizen's rights. | |
He added Britain had to "rise to the challenges" of the "massive social and technological advances" of the previous few decades. |
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