David Canton is a business lawyer and trade-mark agent with a practice focusing on technology issues and technology companies.



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November 24, 2009

Trust us – we are the government – DNA database #fail

Tags: , — David Canton @ 8:15 am

England has turned into one of the least privacy friendly governments.   It is a poster child for being overly invasive – with the usual unsupported claims that is is necessary to fight crime – and the position that governments and police forces can be trusted to be discrete and do the right thing.  But of course, when the official culture is one of invasiveness – the ‘right thing’ is a moving target.

Case in point: Boing Boing reports that a UK inquiry claims the police routinely arrest people they haveo intent of charging solely to get their DNA into their database.

March 31, 2009

London England anti-terror posters remix

Tags: , — David Canton @ 7:45 am

Boing Boing posted a remix challenge to mock the new anti-terror posters I mentioned a few days ago.

Some of them are quite good – definitely worth a look.

March 25, 2009

New London England Anti-terror posters

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 8:25 am

Thats the title of my Slaw post for today.   It reads:

Cory Doctorow writes on Boing Boing about the latest anti-terrorist campaign in England.

His entire post is a worthwhile read – but to get a flavour of it:

The London police have bested their own impressive record for insane and stupid anti-terrorism posters with a new range of signs advising Londoners to go through each others’ trash-bins looking for “suspicious” chemical bottles, and to report on one another for “studying CCTV cameras.”

Essentially, this redefines “suspicious” as anything outside of the direct experience of the most frightened, ignorant and foolish people in any neighborhood.

So in addition to being suspected of being a terrorist if you take a photograph of a police officer, or of a public facility, or of a surveillance camera, you are a suspect if you even look at a surveillance camera!

March 9, 2009

Peers question British surveillance

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 8:20 am

For the London Free Press – March 9, 2009

Read this on Canoe

George Orwell’s depiction of state surveillance in 1984 is beginning to look less like science fiction and more like reality in the United Kingdom, where successive governments have created one of the most extensive and advanced surveillance systems in the world.

The British House of Lords just released a report that expresses concern over the U.K.’s extensive closed-circuit television (CCTV) surveillance network and its growing national DNA database, which contains information even about innocent people.

Its estimated that the U.K. has about 4 million public CCTV cameras. And Britain’s national DNA database contains information on 7% of the population, compared to only 0.5% in the United States.

Many government organizations claim the widespread surveillance and data collection enjoys public support by providing a greater sense of security.

But many others share a concern expressed by John Burrow, former chief constable of Essex, who believes that when the public fully recognizes the capabilities and intrusions of CCTV, it “may well be that there will be a falling off of public confidence in the authorities having control of such system.”

The eye-opening House of Lords report, Surveillance: Citizens and the State, questions the effectiveness of the surveillance and data gathering and stresses the importance of individual privacy.

It examines how surveillance and the collection of personal data are altering the relationship between people and the state and between individuals. It further canvasses whether the right to privacy is too easily overridden by the government’s assertion that these anti-crime measures are necessary.

This is similar to the statement contained in the 2007-08 Canadian Privacy Commissioner’s annual report on the Privacy Act: “The Orwellian dystopia was predicated on a totalitarian society. In our democracy, benevolent intentions appear to be pushing us toward a surveillance society.”

While the report does not go so far as to say that the U.K. has become an Orwellian state, it does say that “the expansion in the use of surveillance represents one of the most significant changes in the life of the nation since the end of the Second World War.”

The House of the Lords covers the claimed advantages of having this information, including the deterrence of crime, assistance to law enforcement, increased public safety, and the efficient provision of public services. Many, however, question how effective surveillance actually is in achieving those goals.

But the report also says that many of Britain’s “surveillance practices are unknown to most people and their potential consequences are not fully appreciated.”

Disadvantages, some of which are more difficult to quantify than the advantages, include the threat to privacy and social relationships, increased mistrust of the State, the risk to personal security and of identity fraud, as well as the selective way in which the technologies might be used to discriminate against certain categories of individuals. It isn’t always about what people are trying to hide, but rather what they are trying to protect.

To safeguard individual privacy from misuse of CCTV surveillance and the National DNA database, the report urges transparency and control over how and by whom the technologies are used.

The debate between state supervision and personal privacy rights will continue.

While it does, be careful — Big Brother just might be watching you, especially if you’re in the U.K.

February 10, 2009

House of Lords: Surveillance society undermines fundamental freedoms

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 8:48 am

The British House of Lords just released a report that expressed concern over the UK’s extensive CCTV surveillance network (4 million cameras) and its growing DNA database containing information even on innocent people.

Read a Guardian article about the report.

January 7, 2009

UK police can hack into PC’s without a warrant

Tags: , — David Canton @ 8:31 am

Slashdot points to a Times article saying that “The Home Office has quietly adopted a new plan to allow police across Britain routinely to hack into people’s personal computers without a warrant. ”

This of course doesn’t sit well with privacy advocates.  It reminds me of the statement in the Canadian Privacy Commissioner’s annual report on the Privacy Act that:  “The Orwellian dystopia was predicated on a totalitarian society. In our democracy, benevolent intentions appear to be pushing us toward a surveillance society.”

December 23, 2008

Cameras as security theatre

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 9:41 am

Techdirt and Slashdot comment that some people have placed images of license plates belonging to people they are not fond of on their own cars, then speeding by photo radar, resulting in the other person getting a ticket. 

Techdirt’s spin on this:

In general, we have trouble with things like speed cameras and red light cameras — both of which don’t tend to do much of anything to make the roads safer (rather, there’s evidence that they lead to more accidents). The reality is that they are really about boosting revenue for local governments, not about safety — which explains why plenty of places have been found illegally changing parameters to make them bring in more revenue.

October 10, 2008

Saturday Oct 11 is International day of protest against surveillance

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 7:45 am

A reminder of my recent post on Slaw and here that tomorrow is being promoted in Europe as a day of protest against surveillance.

Its no wonder that this is happening, especially in light of things like David Fraser posts about today, where cameras are being used in UK parks to catch litterers and pooper scooper violators.

I’ve commented before that this type of surveillance is mere security theatre, doesn’t really accomplish anything, and is offensive to the concepts of privacy and a free society.  Just take a look at this, or read the various posts under the privacy tag on my blog if you are in doubt.

 

September 26, 2008

Britain becoming Orwellian surveillance society

Tags: , — David Canton @ 1:53 pm

Cory Doctorow has a post on Boing Boing entitled Britain will make foreigners carry RFID identity cards and will put us in a huge, Orwellian database: the rest of Britain will be next.  Its worth a read.

He says in part:

My family fled the Soviet Union after the war. They were displaced people (my father was born in a refugee camp in Azerbaijan) who destroyed their papers to protect themselves from the draconian authorities who sought to limit their travel and migration. I used to think it was ironic that my family had gone from Europe to Canada and back to Europe again in a generation, but now I don’t know how long the Doctorows will be staying in Europe — or at least in the UK. The green and pleasant land has suspended habeas corpus, instituted street searches without particularlized suspicion, encourages its citizens to spy and snitch on each other, and now has issued mandatory universal papers that will track we dirty immigrants as we move around our adopted “home,” as part of a xenophobic campaign to arouse fear and resentment against migrants.  …  In living memory, my family has been chased from its home by governments whose policies and justification the Labour Party has aped.

And some people wonder what privacy advocates bristle against things like the increasing use of surveillance cameras. 

 

September 10, 2008

Oct 11 is international day of protest against surveillance

Tags: , , — David Canton @ 8:03 am

That’s the title of my Slaw post today.   It reads:

Boing Boing has a recent post that refers to a day of protest being organized in the EU. Some excerpts:

An international protest against undue surveillance is being held next month on the 11th of October. It is ‘a broad movement of campaigners and organizations is calling on everybody to join action against excessive surveillance by governments and businesses’. We need to get this on the radar for the elections in the USA this year, the EU parliamentary elections next year and many more.

People who constantly feel watched and under surveillance cannot freely and courageously stand up for their rights and for a just society. Mass surveillance is thereby threatening the fabric of a democratic and open society. Mass surveillance is also endangering the work and commitment of civil society organizations.

My personal view is that most so called security measures, including CCTV is security theatre that does not have any significant effect on actual security. For those that say “if you are doing nothing wrong, what’s the problem”, take a look at this Washington Post article.

I look forward to the results of the Federal Privacy Commissioner’s research into public surveillance techniques and technology

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