UK Government Expands Spying Powers
An anonymous submitter provides the best write-up of this story: "Today's front page story of The Guardian covers an attempt by the UK government to expand the number of organisations entitled to demand communications data under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 (RIPA). Previously only Customs and Excise, the Inland Revenue, various law enforcement bodies and intelligence agencies were able to demand this information. The list of agencies proposed in the new Draft Statutory Instrument authorises practically everyone from local councils to the Food Standards Agency to demand traffic data. Traffic data includes almost all information attached to a communication apart from the contents of the communication itself. The location of your mobile phone, for example. Who you called on it and who's called you. The URLs you've visited or IP addresses of people who've visited your server... and the list goes on. The two o'clock update has a quote from the PM's spokesman reassuring us how safe we're all going to be once the Department of Work and Pensions can check our phone records. There's also an editorial piece to emphasise that this is a Bad Thing."
Do you think now would be a good time to ask Nelson Mandela to campain agains apartide hear in the UK
Wouldn't it be nice if schools got all the money they wanted and the army had to hold jumble sales for guns
Don't tell me I haven't done my part for America: I was born, and Nixon -- the corrupt leader of the most powerful country on earth -- resigned the very next day. (I've wondered, though, whether it was something I said, or just the screaming.)
You cannot apply a technological solution to a sociological problem. (Edwards' Law)