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British Foreign Secretary on Surveillance Worries: '"Law Abiding Citizens Have N

Bruce66423 writes "The government minister in charge of GCHQ, the UK's equivalent of the NSA, has used those immortal words, 'Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.' From the article: '...In an interview on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show on Sunday, Mr Hague refused to say whether the British government knew of the existence of Prism before it emerged last week. “I can’t confirm or deny in public what Britain knows about and what Britain doesn’t, for obvious reasons,” he said. However, he implied that the revelations had not taken him by surprise.'" While many are concerned about the reach of PRISM overseas, the Finnish Foreign Minister says he plans to continue using Outlook for email.

272 of 404 comments (clear)

  1. Yeah, right! by whoever57 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

    That statement might have more credibility if it were not for the well documented use of RIPA powers for things unconnected to terrorism and serious crime.

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    1. Re:Yeah, right! by Internetuser1248 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Law abiding governments have nothing to worry about from whistleblowers. Only war criminals, the corrupt and the dishonest should fear the activities of the media.

    2. Re:Yeah, right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wait till the EDL, BNP UKIP coalition gets in and there new STASI like security apparatus gets hold of the graph on connections and starts rounding people up.

    3. Re:Yeah, right! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Yeah, and you see here's the thing. Even if it's an ostensibly democratic government setting up this stuff to combat terrorism, if the next government turns out to be hard right racist fascists like the BNP, you've just put all that power into their hands. Unless you can guarantee 100% that a party like the national socialists will never get into power, these tools should not be constructed for whatever purpose.

    4. Re:Yeah, right! by gl4ss · · Score: 3, Insightful

      but all those war crimes and law breaking are a "critical tool"...

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    5. Re:Yeah, right! by Mitreya · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

      That statement might have more credibility if it were not for the well documented use of RIPA powers for things unconnected to terrorism and serious crime.

      It is all in the definition, my friend.

      Only terrorists/criminals/spies should fear secret activities of the intelligence agencies, because once you are target by such an agency, you are a terrorist (and possibly a spy or a criminal too).

      Just like drone attacks have no collateral damage because anyone they actually kill is effectively redefined to have been a terrorist all along.

    6. Re:Yeah, right! by YoungManKlaus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      5 points and still underrated

    7. Re:Yeah, right! by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 2

      And the fact that they keep leaving all the "secure" data on the Underground.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    8. Re:Yeah, right! by sosume · · Score: 5, Insightful

      "hard right racist fascists like the BNP" = right wing
      "a party like the national socialists" = left wing
      so you're arguing that neither left nor right oriented parties should ever get access to these tools when in power. May I add the center?

    9. Re:Yeah, right! by NettiWelho · · Score: 5, Funny

      Law abiding governments have nothing to worry about from whistleblowers. Only war criminals, the corrupt and the dishonest should fear the activities of the media.

      if(filterhits>flaggingthreshold){ //Subversive thoughts have been detected.
      addFlag("Internetuser1248 (1787630)", reeduacationeesList);
      alertAgent(availableAgent());
      }

    10. Re:Yeah, right! by MrMickS · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "hard right racist fascists like the BNP" = right wing
      "a party like the national socialists" = left wing
      so you're arguing that neither left nor right oriented parties should ever get access to these tools when in power. May I add the center?

      I think he's implying that extreme parties of either persuasion would use the laws to enforce their ideology. Any group that believes that they are right to the exclusion of all other viewpoints is a danger and should be feared in power.

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    11. Re:Yeah, right! by lxs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Only dumbass Americans see national socialists as left wing (and modern day fascists wishing to wash off the Nazi stench but I'm giving you the benefit of the doubt here)

    12. Re:Yeah, right! by Intrepid+imaginaut · · Score: 1

      National socialists. But whatever flag they're running under the point is that even with the best intentions, you've no idea what the next guy will do with your panopticon. So don't buiild one.

    13. Re:Yeah, right! by rtb61 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      What there is to fear.

      Arrest, often extremely violent, even lethal.
      Confiscation of all electronic goods for months (replace at own expense, no choice in today's connected era).
      Extended trials and legal fees (measured in months if not years, Bradley Manning a glaring example).
      Freezing of Assets
      Imprisonment during extended trial, due to inability to fund high bail costs.
      Threats of extended prison terms, measured in decades.
      Trial by government compliant media, found guilty upon accusation and guilt spread far and wide to ensure all possible juries are tainted against you.
      Threats against family members and friends to receive similar treatment.
      Family members and friends actually receiving similar treatment.
      Coercive tactics continue until you falsely plead guilty to a lesser charge and agree to remain silent.

      Anyone recognise this pattern. It hasn't happened just once but time and time again. All this surveillance provides them with ample ammunition to make spurious and circumstantial claims to attack anybody, well at least anybody not extraordinarily wealthy and what happens when it is all over. Well, tough luck chump, tens of thousands of dollars gone, months behind bars, family members and friends fear association with you and unemployment. As for the government, hmm, whoops tee hee, our wrong and they can do it to you all over again.

      The whole idea of due process was to keep abuse of power in check, not let strumped up liars like Uncle Tom Obama or The Shrub or Darth Cheney to abandon the whole process to empower the CIA and it's private for profit contractors.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    14. Re:Yeah, right! by davester666 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How else will we be able to find everybody infringing MPAA and RIAA copyright-protected material?

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    15. Re:Yeah, right! by Jessified · · Score: 1

      So much win. so. much. win.

    16. Re:Yeah, right! by archshade · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree that the centre should not have the tools under discussion. You suggestion that far left and far far right are further away from each other than from a central democratic position is flawed.

      The archetypal manifestation of the far left is communism. In comunism the party elite take full control of the the system, supposidley to distrubute wealth evenly among the population (although I do not beleive this has ever happend). The party also used there power to control the populace to maintain the status quo and there positions.

      The archetypal manifestation of the far right is fascism. In fascism the goverment takes all the economic and political power and gives it to an elite few. The elite few are meant to provide a functioning society for the populace in exchange for them being held above all others (this has on occasion happend, however the elite more often than not (by a wide margin) abbuse there power, to the detriment of the populace).

      Effectivley it can be shown that the far left and the the far right are closer than the moderate left to the far left or the moderate right to the far right. This has bee described as Horseshoe theory/horshoe of politics.

      You also suggest that the "national socialist party" = "left wing", this really is not true anymore since WWII, national socialism is connected to the the German Nazi party, and only parties wishing to attach the Nazi image would use this terminology to describe themselves. The Nazi party was a [agressive] nationalist party, wich ultimatley used fascist techniques to backup there stance.

      --
      Most Damage is done by people who are AWAKE
    17. Re:Yeah, right! by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "hard right racist fascists like the BNP" = right wing
      "a party like the national socialists" = left wing
      so you're arguing that neither left nor right oriented parties should ever get access to these tools when in power. May I add the center?

      I think he's implying that extreme parties of either persuasion would use the laws to enforce their ideology. Any group that believes that they are right to the exclusion of all other viewpoints is a danger and should be feared in power.

      If you want to rephrase/salvage what this Fox News watching right wing drone was trying to express, it would be more accurate to say that totalitarian tendencies exists on both sides of the political spectrum. What he actually was implying, i.e. that the Nazis were left wing movement is a load of steaming horse manure. You only have to take a look at which elements of the political spectrum the Nazis preferred to murder: Communists, anarchists, social democrats, liberals, Christians that opposed his persecution of minorities and actually practiced christian core values like compassion, non-violence (and if you get right down to it some of the core teachings of Jesus Christ were pretty left wing: "Again I say to you, it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God." [Matthew 19:24], "But many that are first shall be last; and the last shall be first." [Matthew 19:30], it was later generations who turned Christ into a M16 carrying faith warrior). There were precious few right wing social conservatives and hard line nationalists that the Nazis lined up against a wall or sent to the gas chamber. The usual default justification for the Nazis being 'left wing' is that their movement had the word 'socialist' in its name. If that is true then by the same logic the Democratic People's Republic of North-Korea must be a fully functioning democracy with free elections and all the civil liberties that implies.

      --
      Only to idiots, are orders laws.
      -- Henning von Tresckow
    18. Re:Yeah, right! by Jessified · · Score: 2

      Very true. Hadn't thought of it from that angle before but excellent point. Of course if they ever get into power they can just enact their own laws (presumably they have support if they were voted in..)

    19. Re:Yeah, right! by Jessified · · Score: 1

      When have innocent people ever in the history of humanity been unfairly punished? Come on, guys.

    20. Re:Yeah, right! by erikkemperman · · Score: 1

      Wish I hadn't spent my mod points on trolls now...

      --
      Gosh, thanks. That must be why the other ships call me Meatfucker -- GCU Grey Area (Eccentric)
    21. Re:Yeah, right! by xelah · · Score: 1

      I don't think this works well as an argument (especially when it invokes the Nazis) because most people dismiss the possibility of a really bad government like the Nazis getting in to power in their own countries. It's not the only one, though. Government powers are exercised through those who make them up. Those individuals can do bad things. In the UK, animal rights activists at the DVLA used driving licence records to locate a target (http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1475082/DVLA-mole-jailed-for-aiding-guinea-pig-farm-activists.html), and police have a history of selling information to journalists and criminals (eg, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/crime/8713194/Hundreds-of-police-officers-caught-illegally-accessing-criminal-records-computer.html). People are just more convinced by low-level everyday corruption and misuse by untrustworthy individuals than by by statements such as 'what if the Nazis come back?'. At least they are in the UK, anyway

    22. Re:Yeah, right! by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2

      The national socialists were centrists. They promised that they would replace the destructive cycle of class warfare with a new spirit of cooperation against the "real" enemies of Germany...

    23. Re:Yeah, right! by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

      That statement might have more credibility if it were not for the well documented use of RIPA powers for things unconnected to terrorism and serious crime.

      Remember, only criminals run to catch the subway!

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    24. Re:Yeah, right! by jandersen · · Score: 1

      Strictly speaking, what he said was "Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear ..."; the word "should" is quite revealing, as it changes the meaning to "This is how it ought to be ...". This use of words suggests that he knows this isnt quite the case.

    25. Re:Yeah, right! by AdmV0rl0n · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The debate about Nazi and where they sit gets skewed. Hilter found much that he shared and created the Nazi party from the German Workers party. He aligned himself with the socialists, until he was famously able to turn to them and stated in Parliament 'And now I don't need you any more'.

      Politics is circular, not so much left or right. If middle ground sits at the tp of the circle, offering a level of moderate landscaping, other hardline doctrines slide down the circle, and meet at the bottom, which is where you'll actually find Nazi'ism and communisim and other foul totalitarian and political ideals on near common ground.

      I laugh at leftists who persist in trying to find a big enough gap away from Nazi'ism. Socialism IS linked to nazi'ism both in history and idealogy. Hilter nationalised industry. He made enrolled people into the state, and he grew the fucking shit from the German workers party. He carried out a class war - many aspects of his bullshit came directly from socialism.It is true that parts of his evil craven idealogy were not socialist in nature, but parts of it were.

      I agree that at both ends of the spectrum, you'll find a strange similar evil to achieve control in a totalitarian aspect share a commonality. Its why you'll find at rally's the right wing hardliners carry stanley knives and the hard left scum carry claw hammers. Neither side believes in open democracy.

      In the 30's in Germany - it fell to gangs of brown shirts, or communists, and as the violence and loss of control escalated, the rule of law and democracy was lost. Democracy is not to be decided by small bands of thuggery precahing their twisted idealism as a new religion.

      --
      We`re all equal .. Just some of us are less equal than others.
    26. Re:Yeah, right! by nospam007 · · Score: 1

      "I don't think this works well as an argument (especially when it invokes the Nazis) because most people dismiss the possibility of a really bad government like the Nazis getting in to power in their own countries."

      You don't need Nazis, Alan Turing was an invaluable part of the Governmental spy-agency and still they went after him because he was gay when they didn't need him anymore.

      Bad laws made by bigots in the legislative don't need a bad executive.

    27. Re:Yeah, right! by N1AK · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you want to rephrase/salvage what this Fox News watching right wing drone was trying to express

      You'd come over as marginally less deluded if you didn't jump on a post which clearly didn't have a bias toward either end of the political spectrum for being biased and do so by using clichéd national stereotypes which don't even apply; but hell if you intended to inform or influence anyone rather than rant you'd of spotted that it wasn't working and tried a little civility long ago.

    28. Re:Yeah, right! by nickmh · · Score: 1

      So when the definition of Terrorism and Criminal gets redefined? by some wacko Government or pressure group that has been voted in to "save" everyone from themselves or the oppressive/unfair system after the West collapses. If you can redefine the fundamental natural right of a Man and Woman to join together to raise a family, and pass provision for the state to claim responsibility for the off spring (Economic/Societal units) of that Union? You can redefine anything you damn well like!

    29. Re:Yeah, right! by Xest · · Score: 2

      No, he's not arguing that, because the Nazi's weren't left wing and I'm not sure why you'd think they were unless you assume because they have socialism in their name that makes them left-wing socialists, but then I guess you think the Democratic People's Republic of Korea is a Democratic People's Republic too right?

    30. Re:Yeah, right! by AdmV0rl0n · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The creation and implementation of such systems is a lurch towards totalitarianism. It is equally bad news should a state cease to be moderate, and any such system will be turned against people in the society. The problem with the ideal 'you have nothing to fear so long as you are law abiding' is that the people implementing the system, also happen to make the laws. So fundamentally they can arbitrarily decide to make you a law breaker.

      Let me put this another way. If you investigate a person, - at some point, you'll collate enough dirt on them to do them harm. Its that simple, and its that evil.

      I'm English. Its in my legal DNA that my people are supposed to operate in life as innocent until proven guilty. We can read through history the occasons where habeas corpus gets suspended, and its chilling effects.

      --
      We`re all equal .. Just some of us are less equal than others.
    31. Re:Yeah, right! by James_Duncan8181 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "a party like the national socialists" = left wing

      It's an expansive definition of left wing that includes Hitler.

      --
      "To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
    32. Re:Yeah, right! by James_Duncan8181 · · Score: 2

      In his final days Ernst Röhm made a speech seriously underlining the 'socialist' aspect of it within the movement. And if you ever read in detail, it becomes impossible to extract socialism from its involvement. Wether it was nationalisation, class war, the power of state over individual, - the party was born from the German workers party, the list is long.

      In his final days [before being assassinated on Hitler's orders for reasons of political disagreement during the Night of the Long Knives] Ernst Röhm made a speech seriously underlining the 'socialist' aspect of it within the movement. Put like that it sounds less like the party was left wing, no matter what the Northern branches wished.

      --
      "To any truly impartial person, it would be obvious that I am right."
    33. Re:Yeah, right! by Evtim · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "National Socialist in German traditionally abbreviates to Nazi"

      You sure? It sounds logical but a few months ago I read in an etymological book that "Nazi" is the traditional fictional character of the stupid, ignorant, rural type of person that every country has. "Ivan the fool" in Russia for instance. Now the Germans already have "Hans/Kurt the fool" - many folk stories feature the character. Nazi was a subset an referred to such a person specifically (if memory serves) from Bavaria.

      In fact if you called the Nazis "Nazis", you would have been in trouble - this was a name intended to point out the low quality of their electorate and the basic, vulgar, ultra-patriotic party rhetoric.

      In the present day politics I find the most similarities with the Nazis on the right side. Appealing to basic instincts, ultra-patriots, gay-hating, women-degenerating, liberal-haters, minority-haters, xenophobes....

    34. Re:Yeah, right! by xenobyte · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Denmark has the same issue. We have a law allowing extradition to foreign countries of danish nationals in case of terrorism, which was enacted post 9/11 (November 2011 if I remember correctly). It has been used exactly once - not to extradite a terrorist but to extradite a woman who used to have a US-national boyfriend who smuggled drugs. She was charged with knowing about his activities and not reporting it - a very minor crime, and yet the danish courts, all the way to the supreme court - allowed the extradition. Fortunately for her, the crime she was charged with fell for the statute of limitation almost before the extradition proceedings began (i.e. a huge waste of time and money) so she could return as a free woman.

      But it's a huge problem that a law specifically meant for terrorists were used in a relatively minor criminal case in a crime barely punishable by more than a fine here. So much for the terrorist angle.

      --
      "For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
    35. Re:Yeah, right! by ultranova · · Score: 2

      addFlag("Internetuser1248 (1787630)", reeduacationeesList);
      alertAgent(availableAgent());

      Adding an item to a work queue should automatically notify an idle executor, if one exists.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    36. Re:Yeah, right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Adding an item to a work queue should automatically notify an idle executor, if one exists.

      Based on the activities of our drones I think it's safe to say "idle executioner" is only a dream.

    37. Re:Yeah, right! by jalopezp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What? National socialism is a right wing movement. But also, yes you're right. Neither right nor left nor centre should get access to these tools when in power.

    38. Re:Yeah, right! by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Democratic People's Republic of Korea is a Democratic People's Republic too right?

      Well, it has a Kim rather than a King...

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    39. Re:Yeah, right! by digitig · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You don't have to wait. The law abiding would have nothing to fear from this surveillance provided all those with access to the data can be guaranteed to be completely benign (your point, and enough cause to worry in itself) and completely competent: no possibility of misinterpretation of data, no possibility of Buttle/Tuttle data errors, no possibility of that data leaking out to those who shouldn't have it and who might use it for nefarious purposes. But hey, we're safe on that last point, at least. There's no possibility of information leaks from any government department, is there?

      --
      Quidnam Latine loqui modo coepi?
    40. Re:Yeah, right! by thaylin · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I was with you until the idiotic partisan ending. The left and the right are both just as evil and hate the constitution as the other, no matter what they claim their actions speak louder than words.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    41. Re:Yeah, right! by amiga3D · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They've simply redefined the words to mean anyone they want to harass or detain for any reason whatsoever. Anyone can be a terrorist now. We had a guy nut up at work. He'd been hurt on the job and due to a botched operation he was unable to work. He got jerked around for a while and had no pay and was in the process of being fired. Despairing and angry he made some foolish decisions and went to see the top manager at work. Fortunately for the bossman he wasn't in his office. The guy had a gun, I don't know if he was there to threaten or kill the guy but he was wrong anyway. The police were called and the man was trapped. His wife tried to get in to talk him out and so did his brother but the police told them "we don't negotiate with terrorists." Sadly the guy shot himself in his despair. Another terrorist dead. See how easy it is to slide into this kind of thing. Because they defined him as a terrorist in their minds he became nonhuman to them. Everyone hates terrorists. If you can define someone as a terrorist you can do any damn thing you want to them.

    42. Re:Yeah, right! by Ash+Vince · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wish I hadn't spent my mod points on trolls now...

      I guess you pay attention to the guideline about concentrating on modding up rather than down :)

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    43. Re:Yeah, right! by DJRumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You imply his ideology was socialist in nature (or at least part of it was), and then contradict that statement in your second sentence stating he essentially used the socialist party to gain enough power to the point where they were no longer needed.

      I don't think you understand the definition of ideology.

      Simply claiming to be something, doesn't make it so. The reference above to the Democratic People's Republic of North-Korea is a good example, as are right wing extremists claiming to be born again Christians, yet follow none of the basic tenants of that religion. Socialism for Hitler was nothing more than a vehicle, not an ideology. The majority of scholars agree that his leanings were definitely right wing, although he often attacked both parties when they strayed from his personal ideology.

      Any civilization today has aspects of socialism. it is nearly impossible to have a structured society without some form of body politic which actively promotes social services that the public recognizes are necessary for basic services. The very nature of civilization requires aspects of socialism to thrive.

      It is simply the degree to which they think the government should control things that defines 'socialism'.

    44. Re:Yeah, right! by YalithKBK · · Score: 2

      Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

      That statement might have more credibility if it were not for the well documented use of RIPA powers for things unconnected to terrorism and serious crime.

      The minister left out the word "suspected" from that thought.

    45. Re:Yeah, right! by Bearhouse · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You could add to this the 'unofficial' abuses that are possible, such as undermining political opponents, blackmail etc., made possible by this kind of pervasive technology.
      The temptation is there, and too much for many to resist, despite all the controls that are supposed to be in place.

      Just an anecdotal example; a friend of mine was dating a police officer, after a while, one evening after a few drinks she let slip that she'd checked out all his official records before deciding to take things further. OK, understandable, but still an abuse of power.
      Humans are human; give them these tools and they will abuse them.

    46. Re:Yeah, right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      War criminals, the corrupt and the dishonest do not need to fear the media when the media is in bed with them.

      When the powerful in office and the powerful in media share the same political ideals, it's only natural that they work together to achieve them. Sure they may step on each others' toes sometimes, show some pretend outrage or say "I'm deeply concerned," but that's life.

      What is an unstoppable force? The power to make or enforce laws + a supportive media + millions of gullible followers + an apathetic opposition.

    47. Re:Yeah, right! by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The debate about Nazi and where they sit gets skewed. Hilter found much that he shared and created the Nazi party from the German Workers party. He aligned himself with the socialists, until he was famously able to turn to them and stated in Parliament 'And now I don't need you any more'.

      Politics is circular, not so much left or right. If middle ground sits at the tp of the circle, offering a level of moderate landscaping, other hardline doctrines slide down the circle, and meet at the bottom, which is where you'll actually find Nazi'ism and communisim and other foul totalitarian and political ideals on near common ground.

      I laugh at leftists who persist in trying to find a big enough gap away from Nazi'ism. Socialism IS linked to nazi'ism both in history and idealogy. Hilter nationalised industry. He made enrolled people into the state, and he grew the fucking shit from the German workers party. He carried out a class war - many aspects of his bullshit came directly from socialism.It is true that parts of his evil craven idealogy were not socialist in nature, but parts of it were.

      I agree that at both ends of the spectrum, you'll find a strange similar evil to achieve control in a totalitarian aspect share a commonality. Its why you'll find at rally's the right wing hardliners carry stanley knives and the hard left scum carry claw hammers. Neither side believes in open democracy.

      In the 30's in Germany - it fell to gangs of brown shirts, or communists, and as the violence and loss of control escalated, the rule of law and democracy was lost. Democracy is not to be decided by small bands of thuggery precahing their twisted idealism as a new religion.

      I again refer you to Hitler's kill list, how many right wingers and social conservatives did he line up against a wall? A few, but the vast majority of his victims were the 'liberals'/socialists' (which in Fox News parlance is synonymous with 'left wing' which in turn seems to be only two steps up from being a child molester) and people he deemed to be racially inferior. Hitler as a general rule seems to have gotten along very well with the moneyed classes even though he and his party were not ideologically devoted to private ownership and thus the Nazis did not engage in large scale nationalisation of industry in Germany. Dornier, Messerschmitt and Mercedes to name a few major German industrial corporations were not nationalised, Junkers on the other hand was 'nationalised' because its founder Prof. Hugo Junkers was a liberal who tolerated leftist practices like 'workers councils' among his employees. It is an interesting irony that the word 'Junkers' is pretty much synonymous with 'Stuka' which in turn is synonymous with 'terror' and yet it is the name of one of the few industrialists in Germany who saw Hitler for what he was and had enough spine to tell the little git to go f**k him self. To be fair to German conservatives quite a few of them loathed Hitler every bit as much as the left wing, the point is that most of them either supported him or went with the flow in when he gained power. Nationalisation seems to have been reserved for war vital industrial corporations whose leaders/owners were regime critical and who had the guts to stand by their convictions.

      --
      Only to idiots, are orders laws.
      -- Henning von Tresckow
    48. Re:Yeah, right! by RabidReindeer · · Score: 2

      'Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

      People who say things like this frighten me.

    49. Re:Yeah, right! by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Wait till the EDL, BNP UKIP coalition gets in and there new STASI like security apparatus gets hold of the graph on connections and starts rounding people up.

      Let me guess, this line of thinking is based on what the media is telling you right? You know, much like what the media is telling people about the various tea party groups. While hiding things on groups like occupy, and even the government of the day itself.

      Rectal inversion syndrome seems to be pretty common in this thread.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    50. Re:Yeah, right! by sosume · · Score: 1

      Not really. National socialism does differ a lot from international socialism, but beside killing millions, the Nazi party did introduce national healthcare, a public transportation system, and nationalized industries such as oil. They were in favor of a large government. They built cheap Volkswagens for all (Arian) citizens. I wouldn't call that right-wing. As a matter of fact, the thing most extreme left regimes from the past have in common is that they tend to slaughter quite a few of their citizens.
      But my extremely shallow definitions of left vs right are "there is no ownership, everything should be state controlled" versus "ownership is absolute, there should be no government". It really depends on your definition.

    51. Re:Yeah, right! by KGIII · · Score: 1

      I think you're missing a post in there. The person he was responding to didn't actually say that, they quoted the parent post as having said that.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    52. Re:Yeah, right! by houbou · · Score: 1

      When they have Data, they have the data, if it's criminal activities which are unrelated to their lines of investigations, they will pass it along to the proper agencies, it makes evil sense.

    53. Re:Yeah, right! by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      What? National socialism is a right wing movement. But also, yes you're right. Neither right nor left nor centre should get access to these tools when in power.

      Right wing movements don't use government power to seize industry.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    54. Re:Yeah, right! by cusco · · Score: 1

      Well, really, there hasn't been anyone from the left, or even a moderate, in the White House for almost half a century. For that matter there are damn few moderates in Congress any more, Tricky Dick would be too far left for even the Democratic Party today.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    55. Re:Yeah, right! by cusco · · Score: 3, Informative

      People who **THINK** like that frighten me.

      --
      "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
    56. Re:Yeah, right! by misexistentialist · · Score: 1

      You only have to take a look at which elements of the political spectrum the Nazis preferred to murder: Communists, anarchists, social democrats, liberals, Christians

      Socialists are famous for liquidating rival factions. Who would Obama rather have seen dead in 2008, Hilary or McCain?

    57. Re:Yeah, right! by mdw2 · · Score: 1

      Correct, right wing governments are an effect of industry seizing government, not a cause of government seizing industry. However the end result is the same. Industry and government in an incestuous relationship where they become the same thing.

      --
      This sig intentionally left blank.
    58. Re:Yeah, right! by tqk · · Score: 1

      Similarly I find it hypocritical that right wingers read Any Rand and glorify her teachings of greed and selfishness ...

      I take it that you've never actually read any of her stuff.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    59. Re:Yeah, right! by KGIII · · Score: 1

      From OED:

      Nazi, n. and adj.

      Pronunciation: Brit. /ntsi/ , /natsi/ , U.S. /ntsi/ , /nætsi/ (rare) Brit. /nzi/ , U.S. /nzi/
      Etymology: German Nazi (c1920), shortened Nationalsozialist or Nationalsozialistisch (see National Socialist adj. and n.). Compare French Nazi (1930).

      The spelling with z probably arose by analogy with Sozi (shortened Sozialist socialist n. and adj.).

      The term was originally used by opponents of the National Socialist German Workers' Party and may have been influenced by Bavarian Nazi , a familiar form of the proper name Ignatius and used to refer to or characterize an awkward or clumsy person. The German form Inter-Nazi (shortened Internationale Internationale n.) which is attested much earlier may also have contributed to the adoption of the term Nazi.

      It seems you're correct (according to OED) though were missing some of the details.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    60. Re:Yeah, right! by KGIII · · Score: 1

      That should have said "partially correct" by the way. Sorry 'bout that.

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    61. Re:Yeah, right! by funky_vibes · · Score: 1

      Socialism is about enforced social policies.

      National socialism is about creating a nationalist society.

      No overlap.

    62. Re:Yeah, right! by fritsd · · Score: 1

      So, after this court case, the law has been revoked, yes?

      --
      To be, or not to be: isn't that quite logical, Slashdot Beta?
    63. Re:Yeah, right! by tqk · · Score: 1

      "a party like the national socialists" = left wing

      It's an expansive definition of left wing that includes Hitler.

      It just punctuates the stupidity of using "left vs. right" (and liberal vs. conservative) in modern day politics. The typical moron in a hurry (at both ends of this imagined spectrum) thinks the Commies/Soviets were leftist. Both Lenin and Stalin were far from it. Both the Soviets and Nazis were Fascists, and they both excelled in PR obfuscation to get away with it (for some time).

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    64. Re:Yeah, right! by tqk · · Score: 1

      As a matter of fact, the thing most extreme left regimes from the past have in common is that they tend to slaughter quite a few of their citizens.

      Yeah, like Franco's Spain, Pinochet's Chile, Argentina, Guatemala, Britain's India, ...

      Oh, wait ...

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    65. Re: Yeah, right! by Mabhatter · · Score: 1

      The whole problem is that "law abiding citizens" isn't very great... Because the LAWS can be changed to make certain citizens automatically be breaking them. Look how quickly rules for previous lawbreakers change, like having to register as a sex offender decades after serving your time.

    66. Re:Yeah, right! by Qzukk · · Score: 3, Insightful

      the Nazi party did introduce national healthcare

      Did they? The nazi party came around in 1920. Meanwhile Germany had the world's oldest national social health insurance system dating from around 1890.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    67. Re:Yeah, right! by tqk · · Score: 1

      ... Uncle Tom Obama or The Shrub or Darth Cheney ...

      I was with you until the idiotic partisan ending.

      Reading comprehension failure.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    68. Re:Yeah, right! by funky_vibes · · Score: 1

      Fascist political party?
      If only we'd be that lucky.

      Imagine the money these guys will make, when the whole package is out-sourced to the highest bidder.

    69. Re:Yeah, right! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about modding down trolls? ;)

    70. Re:Yeah, right! by tqk · · Score: 4, Informative

      Similarly I find it hypocritical that right wingers read Any Rand and glorify her teachings of greed and selfishness ...

      I take it that you've never actually read any of her stuff.

      I have. Please elaborate on where he is wrong.

      Rand "taught" that "From each according to their means, to each according to their need" was greed; that an obligation to be charitable is the opposite of charity.

      Rand "taught" that everyone had the right to be paid for the fruits of their labour, not coerced to give it up just because someone else wanted it. The former is justice. The latter is greedy. She did not glorify greed. She "taught" that selfishness is a virtuous right of all, because we all deserve that right because of what we are.

      Rand "taught" that the smallest minority is the individual, and if you can't defend individuals' rights you can't defend anyone.

      Rand was never a defender of Wall St. and cozy deals with government going easy on the rich. She despised corporatocracy.

      "An idea is not responsible for those who hold it", and I'll be the first to agree a lot of very slimey characters have used her ideas to justify their actions.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    71. Re: Yeah, right! by Penguinisto · · Score: 1

      Yep. Now imagine all the myriad of things that they already do behind closed doors & in the shadows that we don't know about...and will most likely never find out about.

      Depends -

      Sometimes it's a good/legitimate thing (the F-117 Stealth Fighter program was originally a black-funded project.)

      Sometimes it's a grab for power (the recent NSA crap.)

      --
      Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
    72. Re:Yeah, right! by You're+All+Wrong · · Score: 1

      > Socialists are famous for liquidating rival factions

      Name one. "Socialist" does not mean what you think it means. Having the word "socialist" in a party name is no more an indication that a party is socialist than having the word "democratic" in a country name indicates the country is democratic. (And if anything the *negative* correlation is quite strong.)

      --
      Your head of state is a corrupt weasel, I hope you're happy.
    73. Re:Yeah, right! by jc42 · · Score: 1

      ... Also, please tell me what this Perl code means: asdlkfgasdlkfasdlfkjahsdlfkjh. Does it really replicate the security features in the Windows kernel?

      Not quite; it also fixes several undocumented holes in Windows security.

      None of these holes are actually known to MS, because the hackers who found them were wary of prosecution if they told anyone - especially the MS security people - what they knew.

      (If you were JAPH, you'd know this when you read the code.)

      --
      Those who do study history are doomed to stand helplessly by while everyone else repeats it.
    74. Re:Yeah, right! by mpe · · Score: 1

      The point the original post was making is that just because they called themselves "socialists" doesn't necessarily make it true.

      It's fairly common in politics for entities to try to re-define terms, even to the point of twisting them to have the opposite meaning from normal. Another variation on this is very tiny political groups claiming to represent some "silent majority".

    75. Re: Yeah, right! by jmccay · · Score: 1

      Absolute power corrupts absolutely.

      What we have here is a massive data grab that can be mined many ways by who knows how many people. Bush set the infrastructure, & Obama doesn't see any reason not to use it. The head of the IRS has met with Obama more times than every other head of the IRS combined has met with a president. we already know Obama has targeted his political rivals, & the American media does a big yawn at this new scandal!!!!!!!

      --
      At the next eco-hypocrisy-meeting, count the private jets used to get to the meeting. Should be interesting to see that
    76. Re:Yeah, right! by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Nazi economics were centrist. They've implemented quite a few social policies, yes, but they have also supported big businesses (and e.g. suppressed trade unions) where it suited them.

      Nazi social policies, now, those were prominently right-wing.

    77. Re:Yeah, right! by freman · · Score: 1

      Funny thing is, if we were to dig around in their personal lives and post what we found... we'd end up in jail so quickly...

    78. Re:Yeah, right! by MZoom · · Score: 1

      I again refer you to Hitler's kill list, how many right wingers and social conservatives did he line up against a wall?

      The figure of 6 million comes to mind.

      A few, but the vast majority of his victims were the 'liberals'/socialists' (which in Fox News parlance is synonymous with 'left wing' which in turn seems to be only two steps up from being a child molester) and people he deemed to be racially inferior.

      Actually the vast majority were Jews. But don't let facts get in the way! ;)

      --
      Integrity is what you are when nobody is looking.
    79. Re:Yeah, right! by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Do you still beat your wife?

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    80. Re:Yeah, right! by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      Let me guess, everyone who disagrees with you hates the constitution? Freedom FTW.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
  2. Of course by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Because no government has ever labeld an alternative point of view a crime.

    1. Re:Of course by crutchy · · Score: 1

      the problem isn't a fear of government for being a criminal, but fear of government for being labelled a criminal (even if you haven't actually committed a crime)

      and how about that terrorism... what exactly is 'terrorism' again?

      governments seem to use the 'terrorism' label a little too loosely, even if they merely think you associate with so called 'terrorists' (even if you haven't)

      no trial or evidence required of course

  3. Oh Really? by thesupraman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    And this surprises who, exactly?

    Come on, are any of us shocked or surprised by any of this, or is it really just yet another confirmation of how the governments really consider us all
    guilty of something, and how common law (yes, that English institution) went by the by a long time ago?

    I am waiting for the other penny to drop, when people start realising how much of that information gets funneled back in to large US corporations
    when they are working on major overseas deals, etc..

    Perhaps people will start realising they need to protect their own privacy - by which I mean encryption, not our insightful American friends ideas about
    armed militias (hmm, yeah right). The tools have been there for a long time now, most people just dont take it seriously.
    At least then they need to let you know they want your information (at least for email, etc...).

    1. Re:Oh Really? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      *sigh* Always forgetting who owns the wire... And now for 500 more of the same comments we've been hearing for the last 15 years...

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    2. Re:Oh Really? by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Actually it's kind of incredible to me that the NSA's astroturf brigade is not as active and effective as Microsoft's. Maybe reputation management isn't their thing.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Oh Really? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well, I'm still waiting for any of this shit to have an effect on the election. This is just another blip. I would say the astroturf brigade is doing a bang up job. And the election results will bear that out.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    4. Re:Oh Really? by mjwx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      And this surprises who, exactly?

      Been expecting it ever since they voted in conservatives. Right wing governments always increase surveillance under the guise of "Law and Order" and decrease liberties with the by-line "Good citizens have nothing to fear". All of this is done "for the children". If the state declares the child to be the most precious resource of the state, the people will accept any deprivation of liberty. It's not like an ultra-nationalist German politician didn't write a book on this in the 30's (or a leftist British author wrote a satirical version in the 40's).

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    5. Re:Oh Really? by symbolset · · Score: 4, Insightful

      My god you partisan idiots don't give up when silly season is over. It's like a special form of retardation to drag your partisan politics into every realm of life even out of season, without reason or cause - to make every news event your rallying cry. I wish you all would suffocate on your own bile.

      The NSA was founded in 1949 by Harry Truman. It has thrived across so many different administrations and congresses of every stripe that it must be assumed to be immune to partisan politics.

      And this isn't the only shadow agency in the US government. At my last count there were seventeen.

      This is not a partisan thing.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    6. Re:Oh Really? by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 3, Insightful
      governments always increase surveillance under the guise of "Law and Order" and decrease liberties with the by-line "Good citizens have nothing to fear"

      FTFY

      And the USSR was right wing? You are easily fooled by propaganda. The leaning of the government is not relevent information.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    7. Re:Oh Really? by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      I think the parent wasn't playing partisan politics - he was just pointing out that it has little effect on the voting public. Much to our shame. He's right, the reason these proto-Orwellian laws are getting piled on top of each other is because most people simply don't give a shit, or make the mistake of defending their tribal political position (which in a way you did, without realising it, as part of the 'everyone else is a partisan' tribe).

    8. Re:Oh Really? by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Sorry would that be the same 'conservatives' who drastically cut back the ability of the government to hold people without charge that was brought in under our 'left wing' Labour government? The same conservatives who had an MP stand down to hold a by-election based on a privacy as a protest as the rapid erosion of privacy rules under Labour? The same conservatives who refused to put in place laws to further control the press when both Labour and the Lib Dems were demanding it?

      Only the politically ignorant or cognitively challenged would think that where a party sites on the political spectrum defines their views on privacy and surveillance.

    9. Re:Oh Really? by symbolset · · Score: 1

      Was he calling for some random third party then? Why didn't he name it and give it hope? He didn't because he's a Republican and wants to blame the NSA on President Obama and the Democrats as if a shift in executive party would fix this problem.

      As for myself I'm of the "a pox on both their houses" party so your assessment is invalid. I'd be an anarchist if they could get their shit together but of course, being anarchists, they can't.

      A change of Presidential party or Congressional control isn't going to fix this. The problem is far deeper than that.

      I can bring myself to barely tolerate partisan politics for up to six months before a general election and one week after in concession to the necessary political process. That's it: six months every two years is all these mouthbreathers get. Other than that I'm going to be a nuisance about it. These people need to give it a rest. We cannot keep fighting about who's pretending they're in charge every single day of every year. We've got real shit to do.

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    10. Re:Oh Really? by Bartles · · Score: 2

      >

      The NSA was founded in 1949 by Harry Truman. It has thrived across so many different administrations and congresses of every stripe that it must be assumed to be immune to partisan politics.

      Until just several years ago, most would have said the same about the IRS.

    11. Re:Oh Really? by dargaud · · Score: 2
      Seventeen ?

      Try 3000...

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    12. Re:Oh Really? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      You are hilarious! You couldn't have gotten it more wrong, and the one you responded to pretty much hit it. You won't accept that we do this to ourselves. I don't even consider the parties to be separate entities. They draw from the same authority. They are simply irrelevant to me. But you, like too many others, have this 'with us or against us' thing in your heads, or that if I complain about one faction, I'm for the other. I think you are suffering from 'net rage'. And furthermore, you really understand nothing about anarchy.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  4. It's true. by stanIyb · · Score: 5, Funny

    Think about it. Everyone knows that the government is made up of perfect angels who would never abuse their powers or make mistakes, so what do innocent people have to fear? Nothing! History has shown us time and time again that corrupt governments simply don't and can't exist, and if you say otherwise, you just have an overactive imagination.

    I say our next move should be to install government-owned surveillance equipment in everyone's houses. After all, if you have nothing to hide, what do you have to fear? People could be committing crimes in their houses, so it's justified.

    1. Re:It's true. by JustOK · · Score: 1

      it's "XBone"

      --
      rewriting history since 2109
  5. Outlook? by Mistakill · · Score: 4, Funny

    You think it matters what you use for email? If its not encrypted, you can assume PRISM is reading it

    1. Re:Outlook? by slim · · Score: 1

      Not if you paste the ciphertext into your mail program. Then it doesn't matter what the mail program does.

      Not if you (or someone you trust) have examined the source code for your mail program, and you trust that it's been honestly compiled from that source. I am not paranoid enough to believe that my copies of Elm or Thunderbird have NSA backdoors.

      However, I continue to use GMail, because although I understand and accept the issues, it's too damn convenient just to keep using what I've used for the last 10 years.

    2. Re:Outlook? by symbolset · · Score: 1

      The folk who care to be this careful are interesting enough for special attention. You know that, don't you?

      --
      Help stamp out iliturcy.
    3. Re:Outlook? by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Not if you paste the ciphertext into your mail program. Then it doesn't matter what the mail program does.

      Sure, but what about your recipient's email program? I've yet to see a decent web-based FOSS email program that handles encryption (well, I've yet to see a decent web-based FOSS MUA at all, let alone one that has decent mobile platform support). That means I use Gmail, and that means that I'm not going to be sending/receiving much encrypted mail. If you do send me an encrypted message don't be surprised if an unencrypted copy ends up sitting on Google's servers after I'm done with it.

      That's the problem with email encryption - it is a chain as weak as the weakest link, and if you communicate with 20 other people then you only control 5% of that chain to begin with.

    4. Re:Outlook? by amiga3D · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Ever hear about how back in the day the FBI spent over a million dollars of supercomputer time to decrypt an encrypted e-mail only to find it was someone's secret cookie recipe. That's why they hate encryption. They have to spend time and money instead of just scanning stuff.

  6. Just because I have nothing to hide... by AvderTheTerrible · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ..does not mean you have any business going through my life with a fine tooth comb.

    The "Nothing to Hide" argument is a fallacy that falls apart upon examination:
    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110524/00084614407/privacy-is-not-secrecy-debunking-if-youve-got-nothing-to-hide-argument.shtml
    https://chronicle.com/article/Why-Privacy-Matters-Even-if/127461/

    1. Re:Just because I have nothing to hide... by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Everyone has things they want to hide. Bank account statements hidden in envelopes for delivery, love letters hidden in drawers to avoid embarrassment.

      Even if you have done nothing wrong there is always a way to hang you. The modern version of "If one would give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest man, I would find something in them to have him hanged" is "give me access to the search history of the most honest man..." Everything you ever searched for can and will be taken out of context and used against you.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    2. Re:Just because I have nothing to hide... by spacepimp · · Score: 1

      Similarly the base logic follows: If I've done nothing wrong why are you going through my life with a fine tooth comb. The fact they are defending their logic of mass surveillance indiscriminately is the truly frightening part.

  7. Please, please, everyone settle down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's nothing to raise a Führer over!

  8. We should trust what you say, why? by Camael · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Interesting comment from Mr. Hague, a minister of the country that gave us the infamous Star Chamber.

    From wiki:

    The Star Chamber (Latin: Camera stellata) was an English court of law that sat at the royal Palace of Westminster until 1641. ...The court was set up to ensure the fair enforcement of laws against prominent people, those so powerful that ordinary courts could never convict them of their crimes. Court sessions were held in secret, with no indictments, and no witnesses. Evidence was presented in writing. Over time it evolved into a political weapon, a symbol of the misuse and abuse of power by the English monarchy and courts.

    I'm sure the victims of the Star Chamber at that time were equally comforted by the thought that if they were innocent, they had nothing to fear from the men in power. Of course.

    My point being that any proceedings undertaken in secret, and therefore without oversight from the public will inevitably lead to abuses of power.

    I am also troubled by the fact that the present US administration appears to go to great lengths to hide their workings from the US public whom they claim to serve. Just look at the Trans-Pacific Strategic Economic Partnership as an example. When even free trade agreements are being negotiated in secret, something is not right.
     

    1. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Interesting comment from Mr. Hague, a minister of the country that gave us the infamous Star Chamber.

      Not that I disagree with your point, but that was 370 years ago. Would you find something Obama says about racism "interesting" because his country still had slavery only 150 years ago?

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    2. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, you know what, I'm being needlessly picky. A lesson from the past is still a lesson worth remembering.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
    3. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by afc_wimbledon · · Score: 4, Informative

      How about the recent use of terrorism legislation against Iceland during the banking crisis? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landsbanki_Freezing_Order_2008

    4. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by Camael · · Score: 2

      I agree with you, actually.

      I would not even be bringing this history lesson up but for the fact that the men in power today still think that secret proceedings is an acceptable way to conduct their business despite the fact that they tried, and failed terribly 370 years ago.

      Just to make it clear, I have nothing against the UK, which is a fine country. I am however disappointed at this attitude evidenced by its current ruling elite, exemplified by Mr. Hague.

    5. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by furbyhater · · Score: 1

      (comment to undo moderation mistake)

    6. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by tibit · · Score: 1

      Just because there's the word "terrorism" in an informative (non-binding) title of legislation, you shouldn't get your panties in a wad, you know.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    7. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Not that I disagree with your point, but that was 370 years ago. Would you find something Obama says about racism "interesting" because his country still had slavery only 150 years ago?

      Yes. It may have been 150 years ago, but that doesn't mean the country has changed as much as one might assume. For example, many of those former slaves didn't really get the right to vote until 1965. Even today, we're still struggling as a nation to tear down the walls that divide us.

      The question that you must ask is whether Britain's government's tendency to devolve into corrupt secret courts has improved in the past 370 years. My suspicion is that it has not, and that, given the opportunity, the same thing would happen. Why? Because all governments, given the opportunity, try to grab every ounce of power that they can. It's the nature of the beast.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    8. Re:We should trust what you say, why? by wonkey_monkey · · Score: 1

      Seriously? Did I really deserve +5 Insightful just for retracting my own hasty post, and yet no-one down-modded the original? Maybe that just goes to show how rare such a thing is here.

      --
      systemd is Roko's Basilisk.
  9. Who isn't a criminal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I know I am, even though it's incredibly petty and victimless.
    I know the governments are.
    I know the rich are.
    I know the youth is.
    I know the old are.
    I know actual criminals are.
    I know everyone who acts as if they're free are.
    I know everyone who disagrees are.
    I know the companies are.

    Who isn't a criminal?

    1. Re:Who isn't a criminal? by c0lo · · Score: 2

      Who isn't a criminal?

      In the rare occasion somebody isn't, it won't take too much to "demonstrate" a connection with somebody who is. And one wouldn't need more than that "metadata"

      FB avg 4.74 separation distance
      50% of Twitter uses are separated by 4 or less

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
  10. Trust by mendax · · Score: 4, Informative

    "Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies." William Hague, the utter of this sentence, left one very important phrase, this being, "if you trust the government." If I were a Brit I wouldn't trust the government. Brits have been guaranteed fewer civil rights than Americans. But as an American I wouldn't trust the American federal or any state or local government to do the "right thing". Politicians make their careers on doing the wrong thing. It is my hope that the revelations of this unwarranted snooping will raise such a stink that some big heads will roll. And I don't believe for a minute that the government only massages this information for patterns when there is a threat. That is government-issued, anti-FUD bullshit at its best. They are always looking for patterns. That's what the NSA and friends do.

    --
    It's really quite a simple choice: Life, Death, or Los Angeles.
    1. Re:Trust by JasterBobaMereel · · Score: 2

      It depends what you mean by guaranteed civil rights ... We don't have a (written) constitution that guarantees this but we do have a body of legislation that does the same thing (possibly better?)

      Your constitution guarantees freedom of speech (which ours does not explicitly) but you have more legislation that removes this in some (many) circumstances

      --
      Puteulanus fenestra mortis
    2. Re:Trust by Xest · · Score: 2

      "Your constitution guarantees freedom of speech (which ours does not explicitly) but you have more legislation that removes this in some (many) circumstances"

      Even that's not true, the US constitution is nothing but a facade. It makes for a good talking point and a good thing to cry support for in practice but just about every successive US government in the last 100 years or more has breached it in some way for their own ends by placing a nonsensical interpretation on one or more of it's clauses. But for what it's worth I'm not sure it's even practical to adhere to the constitution word for word, times change, the right to bear arms was written well before assault rifles came into play, let alone fighter jets, cruise missiles, and nukes - obviously you've got to have some limit, you can't reasonably allow a private citizen or group of to obtain a nuclear bomb. Politically the only thing the constitution does is allow political lobby groups to beat each other over the head with it with their own arbitrary interpretations. It achieves very little in practice, the odd court case gets won based upon it, but that doesn't stop the plethora that don't and it doesn't stop the plethora of laws that are in breach of it continuing to exist too.

      You don't have freedom of speech in the US any more than you do in many other places. There are still some well defined limits (shouting fire in a crowded theatre) and some not so well defined limits.

      Look at the guy who leaked this whole prism thing, he had to go to Hong Kong to be able to talk about it.

    3. Re:Trust by Ice+Tiger · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Reminds me of:

      Göring: Why, of course, the people don't want war. Why would some poor slob on a farm want to risk his life in a war when the best that he can get out of it is to come back to his farm in one piece? Naturally, the common people don't want war; neither in Russia nor in England nor in America, nor for that matter in Germany. That is understood. But, after all, it is the leaders of the country who determine the policy and it is always a simple matter to drag the people along, whether it is a democracy or a fascist dictatorship or a Parliament or a Communist dictatorship.
      Gilbert: There is one difference. In a democracy, the people have some say in the matter through their elected representatives, and in the United States only Congress can declare wars.
      Göring: Oh, that is all well and good, but, voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is tell them they are being attacked and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same way in any country.

      --
      "Because we are not employing at entry level, offshoring will kill our industry stone dead."
    4. Re:Trust by dywolf · · Score: 1

      if they succeeed in using this logic they can successfully and completely repeal the entire bill of rights.

      you have nothing to hide? then you dont need protection from illegal search and seizure.
      you have nothing to hide? then you dont need protection against self incrimination.
      you have nothing to hide? then you dont need protected speech, press, religion, or assembly....after all, if you're a good little Merican you wont even think or act against the powers that be.
      you have nothing to hide? then you dont need the right and ability to defend yourself.
      you have nothing to hide? then you dont need a public trial to ensure fairness since after all, youre innocent right? surely the court will agree if you have nothing to hide.

      i could go on.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    5. Re:Trust by houghi · · Score: 1

      Is the a mod 'Scary'?

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
  11. Me lacking fear does not make this right by Knutsi · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It seem too me that the capacities of surveillance tech has evolved much faster than public understanding and emotion on the issue. As a non-US citizen, I am disgusted by the idea of my emails or metadata derived from them are massively stored away if they pass through the US, or even my own country. I understand and respect that some level of this must exist in modern society, but we need to have checks and balances that can be vetted by he public.

    And can it not be wrong, even though I have nothing to fear? Have I nothing to fear from this system even if I am not a criminal?

    Ethically, it is limiting to my freedom that there exists a stash of information somewhere that might be abused when taken out of context. Does that not limit my freedom to express radical opinion in private discussions, or even do so satirically? Can I no long play with unpopular ideas using electronic communications? Can I no longer listen to the voice of my opponent without fear of at some point being labeled one of them?

    Legally, how can it be that an email is less of my property than a letter I store in a deposit box in my bank, or send in the mail? Is it not mine or the recipients only? If the state had an army of people standing by to make copies of every letter sent, the situation would be perfectly analogous. Is that not ransacking me, or confiscating my property only to provide me a copy?

    Safety wise, if a record of my life is aggregated in a single source that I have no knowledge of, how can I know that it is truly safe? How can I ensure politicians spend enough on it's safety? I keep my IDs safe to prevent identity theft. What happens the day my life is stolen, but the theft is classified?

    And last but not least, what happens to the balance of power between a state and its people here? The state is the servant of the people, and it should always respect that. When the people become submissive to the state, nothing good happens. We've spend much blood in the past to put it where it belongs, but it always threatens to slip back. We need people like Edward Snowden to blow the whistle when that happens. The very fact that he is now in hiding shows how the power-balance has it's centre of gravity atm.

    1. Re:Me lacking fear does not make this right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I understand and respect that some level of this must exist in modern society

      That's not true at all.

    2. Re:Me lacking fear does not make this right by Jade_Wayfarer · · Score: 1

      I salute you and your well-thought, calm, polite and really mature position. Alas, as history shows us, most often than not mature people were not the one to rule this world. And they have really slim chances of doing this in the foreseeable future. That is why we have paranoid sociopaths in our "ruling class", who really think that one-sided total control is what will keep them in power indefinitely. And that is why we have almost as paranoid "freedom fighters" unable to even think of the compromise - they, too, are often lack the ability to see the whole picture, to separate "idea" from "idealism", and are happily ignored by the majority of the population.

      Speaking of which, we catastrophically lack that calm, rational, mature majority, who would be able to separate apples from orangutans and unnecessary power grab from legitimate enforcement of sane laws. But to have such a majority is a much more crazy dream than even the society with absolute freedom of information and respect of privacy.

      --
      Absence of proof != proof of absence.
  12. The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 4, Informative

    The limited revelations so far have focused on the technical scheme and said little about the regulatory scheme, how it was used operationally. Leaving out that sort of data is like noting that almost everybody has in their house or on their person a device which has a microphone and transmits all it hears to remote listeners, that is a telephone, but leaving out the fact that it is off until you pick it up or turn it on. The existence of this technology and program says very little about if it is legal and if it has been used appropriately.

    Turning off telephone service is inconvenient. Turning off the intelligence services ability to gather timely intelligence can perilous.

    Bali death toll set at 202
    London 7/7 terrorist attacks
    Madrid train attacks
    9-11 attacks

    What has MI-5 had to say?

    U.K. tracking 30 terror plots, 1,600 suspects - updated 11/10/2006

    British authorities are tracking almost 30 high-priority terrorist plots involving 200 networks and 1,600 suspects, the head of Britain’s domestic spy agency said, adding that many of those under surveillance are homegrown terrorists plotting suicide attacks and other mass-casualty bombings.

    What did the next head of MI-5 say a year later?

    New MI5 chief says terror suspects in Britain have doubled in the last year - November 6, 2007

    The new chief of Britain's intelligence service MI5 painted a troubling picture of growing terrorist threat in Britain, saying the number of suspects in the country has more than doubled in the past year – and that many of the new recruits are teenagers....

    and more:

    At Least 4,000 Suspected of Terrorism-Related Activity in Britain, MI5 Director Says - November 6, 2007

    LONDON, Nov. 5 -- British security officials suspect that at least 4,000 people are involved in terrorism-related activities in Britain and that al-Qaeda's "deliberate campaign" against Britain poses the "most immediate and acute peacetime threat" to the nation in a century, the head of Britain's domestic spy agency said Monday.

    And in 2012?

    MI5 warns al-Qaida regaining UK toehold after Arab spring

    You cripple the security services at your peril. Unlike the IRA, al Qaida doesn't tend to phone in warnings before a blast.

    Cheers

    --
    much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    1. Re:The limited revelations so far... by eddy · · Score: 1

      Costly in relation to what, drunk driving?

      --
      Belief is the currency of delusion.
    2. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Freedom is more important than security, so take your cowardice elsewhere.

    3. Re:The limited revelations so far... by tlambert · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You cripple the security services at your peril. Unlike the IRA, al Qaida doesn't tend to phone in warnings before a blast.

      Because they were so incredibly effective at preventing 9/11 in the US, and so effective at stopping the London, UK subway bombings, and so effective at preventing the train bombing in Madrid, Spain, right? I'm feeling less imperiled already.

      Perhaps if instead of complaining about information disclosures, they disclosed the plots they had been able to foil, and had rather public trials, we'd trust them more, but at this point, they act more like a police agency. Police agencies catch bad guys after the fact, after you are already dead from being blown up or shot or stabbed or raped. You know, after the crime.

      I'd prefer not to live in a police state: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_state since their track record at preventing criminal activity from occurring in the first place is generally piss-poor.

    4. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you lose enough security you'll have difficulty enjoying freedom. Taking reasonable steps against terrorists is justified. Of course safeguards and parliamentary oversight need to be a basic part of the security arrangements. I have the courage to face both terrorist and government. You, on the other hand, seem to live in fear of government and ignore the dangers of the terrorist. That won't be a happy combination if widely emulated.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    5. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If you lose enough security you'll have difficulty enjoying freedom.

      No, I won't. I can't imagine how dense you must be to actually be afraid of the terrorist bogeyman. I'll take my chances, thanks.

      Taking reasonable steps against terrorists is justified.

      "Reasonable" to me means that no one's rights or privacy will be violated, and that the constitution will be followed. Gathering everyone's data isn't following the constitution at all, even if they have to get warrants from secret courts to actually look at the data.

      You, on the other hand, seem to live in fear of government and ignore the dangers of the terrorist.

      You're just someone who ignores history. People with power will abuse it. This is a fact.

    6. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      I have the courage to face both terrorist and government.

      You don't have courage at all; otherwise, you wouldn't be so willing to give up freedom and privacy in exchange for security theater. How does it feel to be a naive coward?

    7. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      Because they were so incredibly effective at preventing 9/11 in the US, and so effective at stopping the London, UK subway bombings, and so effective at preventing the train bombing in Madrid, Spain, right? I'm feeling less imperiled already.

      As I understand it, the surveillance was started some time after the 9/11 attacks, so it couldn't have stopped that. But as to attacks in the UK, there has been a steady stream of arrests and trials over the years. A number of those plots were aimed at mass casualties by attacking stadiums, that sort of thing. I'm surprised you apparently haven't heard of them.

      Just a small sample:
      London terror bomb plot: the four terrorists
      Fertiliser bomb plot: The story
      Rucksack Bomb Plot Terror Suspects Nasser, Khalid and Ali Accused of Planning Attack ‘Deadlier than 7/7’

      There have been regular arrests in the US besides actual attacks. Here is a sample.

      I found V for Vendetta to be largely nonsense. And the purpose of police states generally isn't to prevent street crime, but to ensure the survival of an oppressive regime through oppression of the political opposition.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    8. Re:The limited revelations so far... by tlambert · · Score: 1

      Because they were so incredibly effective at preventing 9/11 in the US, and so effective at stopping the London, UK subway bombings, and so effective at preventing the train bombing in Madrid, Spain, right? I'm feeling less imperiled already.

      As I understand it, the surveillance was started some time after the 9/11 attacks, so it couldn't have stopped that.

      I have to stop you right there. ECHELON has been gathering SIGINT for Australia, Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, and the United States since the 1960's: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ECHELON so the SIGINT existed. Add to that Kenneth Williams July 2001 "Phoenix Memo", which was buried by the FBI until Coleen Rowley took advantage of a whistle-blowing law to bring it to light: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Memo

      There was also a Chinese wall between intelligence agencies, the FBI, and the DIA, which was de jure in one direction, but de facto in both directions due to interagency pissing contests about the information flow only going one way, with no tit-for-tat http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Able_Danger#The_wall

    9. Re:The limited revelations so far... by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Take a look at what those suspected of terrorism related activities are actually doing... no wait, that information isn't available. What we do know from media coverage is that nothing more than owning certain documents or associating with other individuals is enough to get people on that list.

      Besides which, define cripple. Leaving it so ridiculously open as whatever the services say they need may be popular with some of the public but it creates more issues than it solves. A nut job with a knife kills someone in the street and it's terrorism, a crazy woman walks into a mosque a few days later with petrol to try and burn it down and we don't talk about terrorism. Why? Because one of them was a muslim and the other one wasn't. If we keep treating so many people as though they are second class, dangerous citizens just because of where they choose to pray then we shouldn't be shocked if a tiny fraction of them come to despise us for it.

    10. Re:The limited revelations so far... by tlambert · · Score: 1

      I have to point out this little tidbit:

      http://newsbusters.org/blogs/noel-sheppard/2013/06/09/911-whistleblower-snowden-defected-china-whatever-he-knows-they-likel

      The point I am trying to get across with this is that the teams doing this type of surveillance are made up of individuals, and as such, if you collect this information about your own citizens, you risk that information falling into unfriendly hands.

      Consider that if Edward Snowden took even just traffic analysis information with him to China, which would be easy to fit on a several DVDs, this information could be used for economic and industrial espionage purposes. It would be very easy to see which companies were talking to which other companies, and impute information about the deals going down between various actors.

      This information could be used to great economic advantage. Who wouldn't want to know the next company with publically traded stock that Google, Apple, or Facebook is in acquisition talks.

      That the information was collected at all in the first place is a loaded gun, and one disgruntled ex-employee or contractor is all it take to pull the trigger on that gun, and in many cases they would have to go to extremes of hiding behind China to do it.

    11. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I have to stop you right there. ECHELON has been gathering SIGINT for ...

      I was referring specifically to the newly revealed PRISM program and its apparent immediate predecessors in the news from several years ago. As far as I know they weren't started until after 9/11, although there were discussions of similar schemes before. The oft rumored ESCHELON program was apparently a Cold War program to gather communications, not the sort of data mining of metadata that has been disclosed as related to PRISM.

      So, I don't think you've really contradicted me. If anything, you've pointed that that the technical means of surveillance is only one part of the picture, as I noted in the original post.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    12. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      The point I am trying to get across with this is that the teams doing this type of surveillance are made up of individuals, and as such, if you collect this information about your own citizens, you risk that information falling into unfriendly hands.

      You take that risk regardless of what you gather it on, even against mortal enemies of your country.

      Cambridge Five
      John Anthony Walker

      People betray their country for all sorts of reasons.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    13. Re:The limited revelations so far... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Just a small sample:
      London terror bomb plot: the four terrorists
      Fertiliser bomb plot: The story
      Rucksack Bomb Plot Terror Suspects Nasser, Khalid and Ali Accused of Planning Attack ‘Deadlier than 7/7’

      There have been regular arrests in the US besides actual attacks. Here is a sample.

      I found V for Vendetta to be largely nonsense. And the purpose of police states generally isn't to prevent street crime, but to ensure the survival of an oppressive regime through oppression of the political opposition.

      There's a bigger list of people detained and jailed in the UK who turned out to be innocent. Since the 9-11 the surveillance has increase by a large factor and the reduction in crime is not even measurable - but of course really there's been a huge reduction in terror attacks, but we can't know about it 'cause it's secret (sigh).

    14. Re:The limited revelations so far... by Xest · · Score: 1

      Yeah, except despite them having this intelligence, despite them having actively tried to recruit Adebolajo he still went and beheaded a soldier with his friend.

      What use is monitoring everyone no matter how much that's restricted if they can't even pick out the actual threats amongst all that data in the first place?

      They want more and more data too, which simply means they'll be less and less able to pick out the real actual threats. Why? Because like the police wanted with the DNA database, they just want a computer to tell them who to go and arrest and don't want to do any old fashioned intelligence gathering and such. The problem is computers cannot do what they want, so the net result is a de-skilling of real actual investigators.

      "Unlike the IRA, al Qaida doesn't tend to phone in warnings before a blast."

      Unlike the IRA, al Qaeda is also mostly inept. Despite all that's been spent on security they still got their shoe bomb, underpants bomb and DHL package bombs onto the planes but none of them detonated because they're simply too dumb. The 21/7 bombing attempt and the Glasgow airport attack (and the bomb they left in London) was another pair of shining examples of utter ineptitude on behalf of the attackers. Even Lee Rigby's murder could barely be called a terrorist attack rather than a not so run-of-the-mill particularly violent London knife crime incident.

      More terrorist plots have failed/had negligible impact because Al Qaeda are a bunch of inept wankers than because MI5 has done anything close to resembling a good job in dealing with the problem in the last decade.

      Limiting the data security forces have so that it's not arbitrary and unlimited does not cripple them, it forces them to go back to focussing on manually intelligence gathering - it forces them to go to the courts for a court order allowing them to tap specific relevant people's phones, e-mail and so forth rather than blanket data farming that leaves them running around like headless chickens entirely unable to tell who is and isn't a threat. They're all sat around waiting for computer to say "terrorist" whilst missing the real threats - the ones who wont even use the obviously and well monitored public information networks.

      They found Osama in the end by good old fashioned spycraft, a decade of waiting for computer to tell them where to find him was a complete failure. Why's that? Because Osama didn't even have an internet connection, let alone a Facebook, Gmail and iTunes account.

    15. Re:The limited revelations so far... by tlambert · · Score: 1

      The point I am trying to get across with this is that the teams doing this type of surveillance are made up of individuals, and as such, if you collect this information about your own citizens, you risk that information falling into unfriendly hands.

      You take that risk regardless of what you gather it on, even against mortal enemies of your country.

      There's zero risk of a betrayal exposing the information if you don't gather it at all in the first place. Information that doesn't exist doesn't fall into the wrong hands. International lines, fine. Within your own countries borders on your own citizens, not so fine.

    16. Re:The limited revelations so far... by swilver · · Score: 1

      .... and all you have is their word that their tracking X terrorist plots and Y suspects.

      I guess if they reported that there were 0 plots and only a few suspects, their funding might get cut, or perhaps we'll realize there is no need for them. Can't have that, so instead some youths boasting on Facebook to set fire to their school is classified as a "terrorist plot"...

    17. Re:The limited revelations so far... by dywolf · · Score: 1

      they would say that wouldnt they?

      nearly every plot they have foiled has been done through old fashioned gumshoe work, not by listening to my grandmother give me her recipe for Ambrosia. all this "intelligence gathering" is a waste of time. if you have to listen to 350+ million people to stop only 2 people, its neither very efficient nor cost effective. it does however help immeasurable with the erosion of the rights of private citizens and further increase the hold on power of the powers that be, further removing and reducing the citizens that are supposed "be the government" from actually controlling that government.

      You can have Liberty. Or you can Security. Or some mix between them.
      But you cannot have pure Liberty and pure Security together; it is a zero-sum game.
      And it inevitably comes about that the security involved is no longer that of the citizenry but of the people in power. the majority of human history has been spent in that position. We have over the past 200 years tried to move the balance further to the liberty side.

      It remains to be seen whether we'll be able to keep it there.

      --
      The guy who said the election was rigged won the presidency with the second-most votes.
    18. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cardpuncher · · Score: 1
      Well, having lived in London at the height of the IRA bombing campaign (a campaign which was, as I recall, supported actively by many Americans and tacitly by most of its politicians - terrorism is in the eye of the beholder) I can tell you that the threat level is a lot lower now than it was then when you couldn't so much as walk past a cast-iron post box on the street without wondering if it was imminently going to explode and eviscerate you. Not many bombings were preceded by warnings.

      The Security Services were pretty much useless at preventing attacks. Despite their collusion in murder, use of inhumane and degrading treatment, internment and fitting-up numerous unfortunates innocent of everything but having an Irish accent. Or rather, because of these things, they were useless as they had no support in the community in which these attacks were planned.

      Oh, but mass surveillance is going to be much more acceptable than hooding and beating the crap out of people, isn't it? No possibility of alienating an entire community just by spying on them, surely? Until people get fed up of the police knocking on their doors because they looked at the "wrong" website or have relatives in the wrong part of Pakistan and have been flagged as one of the many high number of false positives that are inevitable. Though of course the security services have mended their ways since the 1970s - no possibility of torture or political cover-ups since then - so those people have nothing to fear, right? Well, maybe there is a chance of history repeating itself,

      Where there's acknowledged injustice and no interest in addressing it, you're bound to get terrorism. Much cheaper and more productive to fix the problems. Apart from that, the truly dangerous will stick out like a sore thumb when the majority are happily leading their daily lives without a sense of fear and oppression. How does mass surveillance contribute to that objective?

    19. Re:The limited revelations so far... by tibit · · Score: 1

      I'm not a conspiracy theorist, but hey, all we have is their word for those numbers of suspects. For all we know, it might be enough to misdial a number once to be labeled a terror suspect. How can we trust the government when all of this stuff is secret? I'm pretty damn sure that in any clandestine service organization, there's lots of compartmentalization of knowledge and even MI-5 chief is not privy to all of the nitty gritty - he'd be a big liability if it were so. So even if the MI-5 chief will swear by something, there's no way for us to know, because even he truly can't be fully sure of what's going on.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
    20. Re:The limited revelations so far... by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 1

      That's because historically speaking terrorists have killed thousands of people while governments have killed 10s of millions of people. If I have to limit government and that helps the terrorists a little, I'm cool with that. But I'm not convinced it does help the terrorists.

      Even with all this surveillance they're not catching terrorists. What good is it?

    21. Re:The limited revelations so far... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Even if you're right, how many deaths have been prevented? Maybe a hundred every year at most?

      Still a drop in the bucket compared to people dying in traffic accidents or breaking their neck falling from the stairs. Definitely not enough to justify this kind of privacy invasion and suspension of freedoms.

    22. Re:The limited revelations so far... by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      No, I won't. I can't imagine how dense you must be to actually be afraid of the terrorist bogeyman.

      Bogeymen don't have a bodycount, do they? Al Qaida and associates do. In the UK that is at least 53 dead and 700 injured. In the US it is approximately 3,000 dead. The reason it has been this limited is due to the hard work of the security services. There have been many arrests and plots broken up in each country. At the moment you take little chance due to the overall success of anti-terrorism efforts.

      "Reasonable" to me means that no one's rights or privacy will be violated,

      Not even with good cause and a warrant? You're a bit of an extremist then.

      and that the constitution will be followed.

      It has been followed as determined by the courts, and yet you complain bitterly. Your private interpretation of the constitution has no legal force.

      Gathering everyone's data isn't following the constitution at all, even if they have to get warrants from secret courts to actually look at the data.

      As noted above. Does this mean that you oppose the Census as well? And the income tax? Both of those require massive amounts of data going to the Federal government. The Census is a bit of a trick question. I have little doubt you oppose it, but it is constitutionally mandated.

      You're just someone who ignores history. People with power will abuse it. This is a fact.

      It's not clear to me that you understand history, or the workings of democracy, or the workings of the courts. Maybe you could list for us the abuses of power by President Washington? He is a person, he had power. By your reckoning he abused his power. Since your statement is unqualified in any way, there must be some abuses there you have in mind.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    23. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      At the moment you take little chance due to the overall success of anti-terrorism efforts.

      And you know this how? Even before 9/11 (before people cruelly have their freedoms violated at airports and other such nonsense), there was a minuscule likelihood that I would die from a terrorist attack. You're just a scaremongering fool.

      It has been followed as determined by the courts, and yet you complain bitterly

      Rubberstamping broad warrants isn't following the constitution.

      Both of those require massive amounts of data going to the Federal government.

      I'm not worried about just any data, but one thing is clear to me: It is absolutely wrong to get data about millions of Verizon customers.

      You want me to draw a line with perfect accuracy? I can't do such a thing, and neither can you. All I care about is how likely the data is to be abused, whether or not I think it's reasonable for the government to have the data, and how public the information is already.

      Maybe you could list for us the abuses of power by President Washington?

      My point is that it is extremely foolish to not bet on it, you pedantic fool.

      As I said, you ignore history and give the government the benefit of the doubt; it does not deserve it, and that applies to any government.

    24. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      At the moment you take little chance due to the overall success of anti-terrorism efforts.

      I seriously can't believe that you're dense enough to buy into the government's scaremongering. Do you have no mind of your own? The chance that you'll be killed in a terrorist attack are absolutely minuscule with or without your precious security theater, drone.

      Freedom is also more important than safety, so there's that.

    25. Re:The limited revelations so far... by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Rubberstamping broad warrants isn't following the constitution.

      Oh, I suppose you'd object to my saying they're "rubberstamping" warrants, but that appears to be the case given everything that's happened. We can't trust the government when it's acting so secretly, so it is foolish of you to give it the benefit of the doubt.

      Note: I do not care what they have to do to actually look at the data; I care that they were allowed to get it at all.

    26. Re:The limited revelations so far... by Inda · · Score: 1

      This'll get buried, but I have to post it anyway. I couldn't give two shits about Karma.

      The six criminals who were convicted yesterday in the UK were caught because they had no car insurance, and the bombs were in the car they were stopped in.

      Intelligence, like all these snooping methods, has been useless. The police got lucky, again.

      --
      This post contains benzene, nitrosamines, formaldehyde and hydrogen cyanide.
  13. Such as when they declared Iceland to be terrorist by decora · · Score: 4, Interesting

    so they could seize the UK assets stored in failed Icelandic banks (failed after being privatized on the suggestion of UK/US "experts")

  14. never trust an acronym by decora · · Score: 2

    if people dont have ordinary names, they are usually up to no good.

    1. Re:never trust an acronym by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      if people dont have ordinary names, they are usually up to no good.

      Very true. Mostly because people in general are up to no good.

    2. Re:never trust an acronym by Suferick · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Like the GOP?

  15. TSIA by adolf · · Score: 5

    British Foreign Secretary on Surveillance Worries: '"Law Abiding Citizens Have N

    What is N? Where can I get rid of N? Can I buy more N at the store? Should I be worried if I have N?

    FFS, editors. FFS.

    *head in hands*

    1. Re:TSIA by temcat · · Score: 2

      Come on, you aren't law abiding anyway in the eyes of the government, so you shouldn't be worried about having N.

    2. Re:TSIA by pegasustonans · · Score: 1

      British Foreign Secretary on Surveillance Worries: '"Law Abiding Citizens Have N

      What is N? Where can I get rid of N? Can I buy more N at the store? Should I be worried if I have N?

      FFS, editors. FFS.

      *head in hands*

      Law abiding citizens have N.

      N = e(N)suring servility despite a widening gap between the affluent and the poor via unyielding government oversight into every aspect of the life of every individual

      --
      And all our yesterdays have lighted fools The way to dusty death. --Will
    3. Re:TSIA by Xest · · Score: 1

      It's talking about wireless networking. We get faster Wifi if we obey the law. People who commit petty crimes only get 802.11g, the worst criminals are still stuck on 802.11b.

  16. Gandhi's way maybe? by spiritplumber · · Score: 2

    Dear high rankin government employees, especially if you are not directly elected: You first. Love, everyone else. PS: We mean it. Until you accept to live in the glass house you want us to live, we won't sell you food, we won't maintain your technology, we won't even talk to you.

    --
    Liberty - Security - Laziness - Pick any two.
    1. Re:Gandhi's way maybe? by cold+fjord · · Score: 2

      That will work to the same extent that the division of India and Pakistan was peaceful, leading to good relations and a sense of cooperation between the two. That is to say, not at all. Al Qaida is out for world conquest even if it takes 1,000 years. They are not in it for peaceful coexistence. The only peace they will seek with unbelievers is ceasefire until they can rebuild their strength.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re: Gandhi's way maybe? by rmdashrf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      How about stopping with bombing foreign countries first and taking their resources at gun point. People only become extremists if they don't have anything else left to lose.

      --
      Nihil in publicum sputa.
    3. Re: Gandhi's way maybe? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      No, that isn't true at all. You've got an answer, but it doesn't apply to the situation. Ultimately Al Qaida wants to conquer and rule the world for Allah and convert the people of the world to Islam. In the process they will restore the Islamic Caliphate that was dissolved in 1923 with the fall of the Ottoman Empire. Many of the demands that people mistake as their goals are really nothing more than near-term or intermediate objectives.

      The Future of Terrorism: What al-Qaida Really Wants

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    4. Re: Gandhi's way maybe? by Kjella · · Score: 1

      How about stopping with bombing foreign countries first and taking their resources at gun point. People only become extremists if they don't have anything else left to lose.

      Except that's not actually true, there are many poor people around the world who have less than your typical terrorist. In fact there are plenty examples of young males living in first world countries being radicalized into becoming terrorists, head full of ideology but not suffering at all. On the contrary, many countries have been relatively peaceful and secular for a long time even though they were rather primitive and poor.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  17. look up the Silent Witness Rule by decora · · Score: 2

    secret courts are making a comeback in the US.

    1. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      For very limited purposes, generally not trials. They do issue warrants for national security matters and perform oversight.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by turbidostato · · Score: 1

      "For very limited purposes, generally not trials."

      Now. You see... you are answering on a thread starting talking about a secret chamber created for very understandable (for the time) concerns that, alas! was later misused.

      See the parallelism?

    3. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by biodata · · Score: 1

      So law abiding citizens have nothing to fear from secret courts unless they are terrorrists or ... etc. Heard that one before somewhere.

      --
      Korma: Good
    4. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      There isn't much parallelism there. The Star Chamber was formed to conduct trials of suspects from the start. The FISA court doesn't try suspects at all. Abuses of the FISA court are unlikely to persist or go undiscovered since the judges from other courts serve there on a rotating basis.

      Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    5. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Actually terrorists don't have anything to fear either. The FISA court doesn't conduct trials of suspects. It issues warrants. Trials are conducted in other courts. I doubt you've heard that before.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    6. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      But if they have nothing to hide, why are they so secretive?

    7. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      Conducting reviews for the issue of warrants in the FISA court helps to protect the operations and data of the intelligence agencies from unauthorized disclosure, which is rather important. Since any trials are performed in the other courts, it doesn't really have any effect other than the intended one.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    8. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The thoroughly entertaining Mark Steyn refers to the 'Human Rights tribunals' that have sprouted up in the West as 'Star Chambers'. He is right about this too. On the merest accusation of 'offense' being taken they'll interfere with your life and cost you several hundreds of thousands of dollars to defend against. They can mete out punishments like 'never able to publish on the subject again' (censorship is 'death' for a writer) and all sorts of damage to ones professional reputation and credibility. If you don't follow the party political line you will be censored using the power of the State. Sound like a 'free speech' society to you? The Human Rights Tribunals enforcing political correctness (which has a more precise technical name, 'Cultural Marxism') just as the Star Chambers enforced religious conformity. The West is going backwards in terms of liberties.

    9. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Right. I'm so scared of the evil bogeymen who will get me if we don't have secret courts and other such nonsense! Hey, you know, I'd rather take my chances; take your secrecy and excuses and stuff it.

    10. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Cold Fjord has a point.

      I'm not so sure. I do not believe that secret courts and judges that rubber stamp overly-broad warrants are ever a good thing. But yeah, the government does not have any credibility.

    11. Re:look up the Silent Witness Rule by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      The reason I responded was not to disagree, but to expand on cold fjord's point with the experience of Mark Steyn - who you will be entertained by as he simultaneously gives an incisive view on the Inquisatorial nature of the Human Rights "Star Chambers".

  18. Anthony Weiner Disagrees by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a conspiracy theory that a good friend of mine passed along. I have no reason to believe it is true, but I think it can still illustrate the problem with that attitude.

    First off, to recap, Anthony Weiner was a member of congress from New York City. He accidentally tweeted a "calvin klein underwear ad" of himself on his official twitter feed. Within minutes he deleted the tweet, but the damage was done. He ended up resigning and the seat he held, which had been held by democrats for something like 80 years, went to a republican.

    It turned out Weiner had two twitter accounts, a personal one and the official one. He had been regularly using the private account to send suggestive photos to women across the country. Not illegal, but douchey. Although for all we the public know, his (brilliant and hot) wife was fine with it, maybe they had a look-but-don't-touch agreement. Whatever it was, it was their business alone.

    Now, just imagine that somebody at the NSA who was "friendly" to the republicans decided to do a little checking into Weiner and discovered what he was doing on his "private" account. Then they logged into his official twitter account using some back-door or even just something sloppy like a cookie they sniffed off the wire from his own most recent login. Once logged in, they "accidentally" posted the picture and then deleted it a few minutes later.

    Viola, career ruined and republicans get a chance to pick up a seat they would never have had a chance at if nobody had been snooping on Weiner.

    Like I said at the start, I have zero reason to believe that is actually what happened. He probably just forgot what account he was logged into - all the blood had left his brain for other parts of his body. But, what matters here is just how plausible this theory is. The only thing standing in the way of this sort of corruption is the personal integrity of basically everyone with access to these programs at the NSA. Imagine just how easily this kind of ubiquitous surveillance apparatus can be turned to political corruption. We have way too much of that already, no need to make it any easier.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    1. Re:Anthony Weiner Disagrees by aralin · · Score: 1

      Wouldn't it be much more lucrative to blackmail said congressman? :) Or force him to reveal some secrets on his fellow congressmen to save his ass. In modern day and age, everyone is guilty of something. The only difference between a law abiding citizen and a felon is the 4th amendment. You know the police is regularly using drug possession as a tool to put behind bars people they "judged guilty", but cannot get the evidence to prove whatever crime they think was committed? There is a video of former NYC police commissioner advocating this as a useful police procedure in a debate about legalizing marihuana. What happens if such disgustingly corrupt cops have access to those systems.

      --
      If programs would be read like poetry, most programmers would be Vogons.
    2. Re:Anthony Weiner Disagrees by martas · · Score: 1

      Have you considered getting a job with the Secret Service? You managed to uncover a conspiracy that they missed when performing their background check on Huma Abedin, despite no doubt having far more resources than you do. Your intelligence and intuition are stunning. You owe it to this country to use your talents to protect our safety and security!!

    3. Re:Anthony Weiner Disagrees by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      I did nothing, so thanks for the sarcasm. I merely provided links to research done by someone else (which it appears you failed to read). I would also suggest you go an look at "The Muslim Brotherhood in America"
      http://www.centerforsecuritypolicy.org/the-muslim-brotherhood-in-america/
      by Frank Gaffney (who was Deputy Assistant Secretary for Defence under Reagan, and founder of the Center for Security Policy).

      I also suggest you take a look at the Investigative Project on Terrorism's research about the Brotherhood penetration in the White House (which explains why the White House reacts so virulently to calls for investigation - the Obama Administration sees the MB as moderate and agrees with their aims, although the events in the Middle East have forced them to wake up to reality, instead of their deluded dreams of the MB as compatible with Western-style democracy):
      http://www.investigativeproject.org/3869/egyptian-magazine-muslim-brotherhood-infiltrates

      So, you can be sarcastic if you want. You'd get further if you could refute the references I have provided - but I think you'll find the assertion I made about Huma Abedin is true. The reason she passed a background check is that they don't consider Muslim Brotherhood affiliation as a threat these days (which is insane, but that's the current Democratic party for you).

    4. Re:Anthony Weiner Disagrees by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      That is a very convenient position you have there, that way you never have to examine evidence or produce counter-evidence.

      It is easy to see why you wouldn't want to have to produce counter-evidence against his positions. The Center for Security Policy is headed by a man with meaningful credentials, among others:

      Frank Gaffney

      In April 1987, Mr. Gaffney was nominated by President Reagan to become the Assistant Secretary of Defense for International Security Policy, the senior position in the Defense Department with responsibility for policies involving nuclear forces, arms control and U.S.-European defense relations. He acted in that capacity for seven months during which time, he was the Chairman of the prestigious High Level Group, NATO’s senior politico-military committee. He also represented the Secretary of Defense in key U.S.-Soviet negotiations and ministerial meetings.

      From August 1983 until November 1987, Mr. Gaffney was the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Nuclear Forces and Arms Control Policy under Assistant Secretary Richard Perle.

      From February 1981 to August 1983, Mr. Gaffney was a Professional Staff Member on the Senate Armed Services Committee, chaired by Senator John Tower (R-Texas). And, in the latter 1970s, Mr. Gaffney served as an aide to the late Senator Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson (D-Washington) in the areas of defense and foreign policy.

      Tough luck there. Life doesn't always work out the way you expect.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    5. Re:Anthony Weiner Disagrees by SplashMyBandit · · Score: 1

      Many thanks cold fjord. I have no problem being proven wrong, provided *facts* are used to do it - but sadly Falconhell resorted to the usual "labelling" tactic instead. Reading your posts I think you and I have broad agreement on the state of the World. Thanks for the links you have posted about the Soviet period, I'll watch them with great interest.

  19. Ah Yes by Greyfox · · Score: 1, Informative
    The old "If you're doing nothing wrong you have nothing to fear" argument. Except in the same week, it was demonstrated that if you said things the current administration didn't like, the power of an arm of the government would be brought to bear on you. We have a constitution that ostensibly limits the power of government to prevent just such abuses. In an ideal world we have a rule of law, are protected from government retaliation against the opinions we have and no person (including the executive branch) is above the law. In the world actually have, the safeguards against these things have been subverted and the most egregious offenses against law abiding citizens go unpunished.

    So, I suppose, the question is, "What are we going to do about it?"

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Ah Yes by FireFury03 · · Score: 1

      The old "If you're doing nothing wrong you have nothing to fear" argument. Except in the same week, it was demonstrated that if you said things the current administration didn't like, the power of an arm of the government would be brought to bear on you.

      I think in the administration's eyes, saying things they don't like comes under "doing wrong" so the argument is still valid :)

  20. Criminals? by ironman_one · · Score: 1

    Yes I suppose you consider Allan Turing a hardend criminal i that case. You only drygged and killed him.

    1. Re:Criminals? by Jade_Wayfarer · · Score: 1

      Well, as I recall, he committed a crime of unsafe bicycle driving. Repeatedly.

      --
      Absence of proof != proof of absence.
  21. Show me your e-mail of the last 10 years Mr Hague by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After all, you, as a law abiding citizen, have nothing to fear, right ?

  22. Missed a couple by Horshu · · Score: 1

    He left out wankers. And buggerers.

  23. Re:Apparently my English isn't very good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think it's supposed to mean they got to him before he finished ty

  24. Re:Only law abiding by symbolset · · Score: 3, Interesting

    These agencies operate of the foundation of "don't get caught". There will be nothing provable that will be admitted before any court anywhere. Likely some poor judge will try until he has a drunk driving incident, or is revealed as a closet pedophile (much to his own surprise) and is recused.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  25. Re: Meaning by rmdashrf · · Score: 1

    You however seem to fail to understand who creates law and over time seems to dictate how it's interpreted as well.

    --
    Nihil in publicum sputa.
  26. old crap by Tom · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, that quote is really, really old and gets used by politicians a lot.

    Lately, here in Germany, we've started throwing it back at them whenever they are hiding something from us. Like who gives them how much money or which companies they work for after their term, or who paid their campaign, or indeed their last holiday.

    The "if you have nothing to hide..." should be told to them a lot more often, because they've been abusing it for a long, long time.

    Also, since we know that sexual favours are as successful in swaying people as financial incentives, I would like a full record of who my politicians have been sleeping with during their terms. As there are more lies in this area than in any other, we should have 24/7 surveilance and automated reporting. What? You don't have anything to hide, do you?

    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
    1. Re:old crap by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Ask those who have "nothing to hide":

      Questions for people with nothing to hide:

      1. Have you ever had an abortion?

      2. Have you ever cheated on your husband / wife?

      3. Are you currently looking for a new job?

      4. Have you ever being diagnosed with a mental illness?

      5. Are you currently on anti-depressants?

      6. Were you ever sexually abused as a child?

      7. Have you ever fancied someone of the same sex?

      8. Have you ever had sex with someone of the same sex?

      9. Have you ever criticised your current employer or boss to anyone else?

      10. Do you love all of your children equally?

      11. Have you ever fantasized about...

      12. Are you planning to get pregnant in the next two years?

      13. Have you ever lied on a cv/resume?

      14. Are you mean to your wife / husband on a regular or semi-regular basis?

      15. Do you have trouble acquiring or maintaining an erection?

      16. Are you one of those women who’ve never had an orgasm?

      17. What prescription drugs are you currently taking?

      18. Have you ever cut yourself?

      19. Have you ever attempted suicide?

      20. Have you contemplated suicide in the past 2 weeks?

      21. Would you be happy with your answers to these questions being made public? Or being read by your employer, local 23 year old policeman, or nosey neighbour?

      (Source.)

    2. Re:old crap by Chrisq · · Score: 1

      11. Have you ever fantasized about...

      Dude, you have a serious ellipses fetish.

  27. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    Sorry, wtf, seriously??
    References?

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  28. So that everyone by zaax · · Score: 1

    As we are all criminals that means that they can watch everyone. Who watches the watchmen

  29. So that's why... by Alioth · · Score: 2

    Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies.

    There have already been stories of non-terrorist, non-criminal people being deported from the US when going there on vacation because of innocent remarks made on their social networking page that were mis-interpreted by the DHS.

    1. Re:So that's why... by Xest · · Score: 1

      Quite possibly yes.

      I always found it a little odd that people with like, less than 20 followers were getting picked up by the authorities for something they said jokingly but the authorities then treated as a terrorist threat. I mean, what's the chance that one of their followers thought "Hey that doesn't sound like a joke, I'll e-mail MI5!" every time.

      They were almost certainly victims of a data mining operation in every single case I'd wager.

  30. Re:Tony Blair rules the UK by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
    Bliar was innocent bcause he was from the Labour party!

    (probably in the same sense that Hitler was a soclailst)

    --
    Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
  31. Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by Camael · · Score: 4, Informative

    Has our society become so timid and fearful that we are willing to sacrifice long cherished rights to freedom, liberty and privacy to the state in return for a dubious promise of security?

    I say dubious, because for all the vaunted survelliance ongoing right now, it failed to stop the Woolwich stabbing attack. It failed to stop the Boston marathon bombings.

    In all the gruesome examples you cited, note that the acts of terrorism took place despite all the surveillance already taking place then. The effort has failed. How much more freedom and privacy will you demand the public sacrifice in order to achieve greater efficacy?

    I think we are on a very slippery slope, where the temptation is all too great for the ruling parties to take the path of least resistance and extend the coverage gradually to all undesirables and enemies of the state - from terrorists to child pornographers to murderers to robbers to copyright infringers and finally to common members of the public. If you think this is impossible, look to China where it is happening even as we speak. The Chinese government even justified its censorship and surveillance of the internet on the basis of public security in a White Paper , including the following gem :-

    China advocates the rational use of technology to curb dissemination of illegal information online. Based on the characteristics of the Internet and considering the actual requirements of effective administering of the Internet, it advocates the exertion of technical means, in line with relevant laws and regulations and with reference to common international practices, to prevent and curb the harmful effects of illegal information on state security, public interests and minors.

    What lies at the end of the slippery slope? Alan Moore might have the answer. I suggest you look at his book, it is an intriguing read.
       

    1. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      The very fact that the recent attacks were conducted the way that they were suggests that anti-terror intelligence has been largely effective in stopping the "big", "complex" operations such as 9/11 and the 7/7 attacks. Now, it seems that terror cells are reduced to one or two man operations, with little to no planning or central direction.

      I'm fearful of the misuse of power in government as much as anybody, but government serves a purpose, and part of that purpose is to provide for security. The problem with this type of political or religious terror movement is that if you do too little to stop it, then your society will break down due to mass fear and hysteria, and if you do too much, you risk transforming the society your are protecting into an authoritarian state. Both of these outcomes is positive for the terror movement. As such, its important not to descend into hyperbole. A balanced point of view is important when discussing these matters.

    2. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      and part of that purpose is to provide for security.

      But freedom is ultimately more important than security. If their plans to keep us safe include violating any of our fundamental rights, then I'd rather take the 0.00001% chance that I'd die in a terrorist attack.

      A balanced point of view is important when discussing these matters.

      The ones who oppose these rights violations are taking a balanced point of view. The TSA, NSA, Patriot Act, and all the other nonsense that has been going on are evil.

    3. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I say dubious, because for all the vaunted survelliance ongoing right now, it failed to stop the Woolwich stabbing attack [dailymail.co.uk]. It failed to stop the Boston marathon bombings

      The surveillance is a tool, not magic. Even if the surveillance program provides good information it is still only an input to the security services. They still have to act upon it properly. In the case of the Boston Marathon bombing, the FBI appears to have dropped the ball, ignoring the direct warnings of the Russian security services. And somehow they didn't latch onto the trips to Dagestan. The security services are staffed flesh and blood that can make mistakes, no magic software is going to change that.

      I think we are on a very slippery slope, where the temptation is all too great for the ruling parties to take the path of least resistance and extend the coverage gradually to all undesirables and enemies of the state - from terrorists to child pornographers to murderers to robbers to copyright infringers and finally to common members of the public.

      Although I'm willing to agree that the security services need oversight from Parliament, I think there is a limited prospect for the sort of extension that you fear. In most democracies the dividing line between national security and ordinary criminal offenses tends to be well drawn and guarded. The two systems tend to live under different rules.

      If you think this is impossible, look to China where it is happening even as we speak. The Chinese government even justified its censorship and surveillance of the internet on the basis of public security in a White Paper [english.gov.cn], including the following gem

      I would hope it wouldn't be necessary to belabor the point that the British system of government is quite different in both manner and outlook from the government of the People's Republic of China, often referred to as Communist China. I think there is little danger there. They actually have a genuinely oppressive government there and have at best liberalized some.

      What lies at the end of the slippery slope? Alan Moore might have the answer. [wikipedia.org] I suggest you look at his book, it is an intriguing read.

      Thank you, but I'll take Alan Moorehead to Alan Moore any day. I've seen V for Vendetta. The movie is beautiful, the ideas are nonsense.

      'A' for Absurd

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    4. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by iserlohn · · Score: 1

      The ones who oppose these rights violations are taking a balanced point of view. The TSA, NSA, Patriot Act, and all the other nonsense that has been going on are evil.

      Exactly the type of hyperbole I was referring to. You are not advancing the discussion. Most people feel that terrorism is a real threat. Instead of addressing the situation, you take an absolute position and dig in.

    5. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Exactly the type of hyperbole I was referring to.

      It wasn't hyperbole.

      You are not advancing the discussion.

      It's rather difficult to interact with people who are so easily manipulated into giving away all of our freedoms.

      Most people feel that terrorism is a real threat.

      Because they're imbeciles. I know most people can't wrap their puny minds around the concept of freedom being more important than security, and that hurts all of us.

      Instead of addressing the situation, you take an absolute position and dig in.

      An "absolute position"? What else would I do, give up some of my freedoms as some sort of compromise? That sort of compromise isn't acceptable to me, but if that's not what you want from me, then please do tell.

    6. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by stanIyb · · Score: 1

      Exactly the type of hyperbole I was referring to.

      I don't see why you thought that was hyperbole, either. Surely you didn't mean to suggest that (for example) groping everyone who tries to get on a plane is anything less than evil?

    7. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by FireFury03 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Woolwich stabbing attack.

      FFS, The Woolwich murder was *not* terrorism - it was murder, plain and simple. Terrorism is inciting fear in the masses in order to elicit a political change - did a single murder cause the masses to become exceptionally fearful? I don't think so. Why does this murder do anything more to cause fear than any of the other numerous racially/politically motivated murders which are unfortunately reasonably common? It doesn't. I'm certainly not quaking in fear for my life - I'm far more likey to be gravely injured while being robbed than attacked for political reasons.

      So we'll go back to the definition of terrorism - inciting fear to elicit political change. After every incident, the British Government keeps telling us that if we don't let them pass new legislation that infringes on our civil liberties then we won't be safe from "terrorists". After the Woolwich killing the Communications Data Bill was revived despite previously being demolished on its previous appearance. The justification was that if the security services couldn't spy on everyone then we would all be in grave danger of being killed by terrorists. In the case of the Woolwich murder it seems that this isn't in any way justified - the people who carried it out were already known to the security services; they didn't need any new legislation to spy on them, a court order would've done the trick just as well.

      After the April Jones murder, the Online Safety Bill was revived by the government - because apparently all our kids are in danger of being murdered by kiddy fiddlers and that censoring the internet will somehow set all the nutters on the straight and narrow. And yet there seems to be no evidence to support this - it is supposition that porn leads to criminal behaviour, it could be equally possible that there would be more of this criminal behaviour if people *couldn't* relieve themselves through porn. I don't know the answer, but it seems a pretty bad idea to blindly enact laws without much evidence either way - most of the anti-kiddy-porn laws seem to be "I find what you're into distasteful, so you should be locked up" rather than actually designed to stop people getting hurt. To compound these problems, the politicians seem to be conflating protecting the kids from porn with preventing the adults getting at kiddy-porn, which are two separate issues; the Online Safety Bill is supposidly about protecting the kids from being exposed to porn, but its being pushed in response to an adult abusing a child - a completely separate problem.

      So I ask, who are the terrorists? Who is inciting fear for a political end? I would say its the government - they are going out of their way to tell people to be scared after every incident in order to push new legislation that people would otherwise find unacceptable; surely _that_ is exactly what terrorism is?

      When I was growing up, there were a fair number of IRA bombings and they were always played down to avoid stirring up fear. These days the people in power seem to have realised that they don't need to pull the trigger to benefit from the effects of being a terrorist, they only need to stir up fear surrounding existing incidents instead. The terrorists seem to be winning.

    8. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by RabidReindeer · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The very fact that the recent attacks were conducted the way that they were suggests that anti-terror intelligence has been largely effective in stopping the "big", "complex" operations such as 9/11 and the 7/7 attacks. Now, it seems that terror cells are reduced to one or two man operations, with little to no planning or central direction.

      Make no mistake. If I was on an airplane hijacked by terrorists due to lack of programs like this, I'd soil myself, whine, and cry like a little baby. I'm not that brave. But at least I'd be a free little baby, even if it meant I'd die a free little baby.

      A "big" terrorist operation has never been more than a handful of active participants and the organization backing them isn't that large either.

      The United States Government, on the other hand, is a behemoth whose control and influence extends from the corridors of commerce right down to yurts on the edge of the Gobi Desert. Bin Ladin was a wealthy man, but his bank account was pocket change compared to the US Treasury.

      Terrorists can make your life living hell, briefly. The US Government can make everyone's life living hell indefinitely. They have the resources to grind most individuals into a fine paste no matter who you are, where you live, or even how many millions you have. Russia has already shown what having a few billion dollars means for oligarchs who displease the regime.

      The only thing that keeps the behemoth from being a juggernaut is that when the country was founded, a set of rigorous principles backed by a codified set of laws on a framework of checks and balances was constructed and implemented. And was done so precisely because they had seen that being governed by "men of good judgement" wasn't working for them.

      Much is made of the famous tripod of the Executive, Judical and Legislative branches of the government and how they are integral to Checks and Balances, but there is a fourth leg as well: the Citizenry. Just because they aren't named as an actual organization doesn't mean that they're discounted. We are supposed to have "the right to remain secure in our own homes", for example. Which you aren't, when someone obtains cellphone location information extracted through the very walls of that home.

      If you want to distil the current hoopla down to its essentials, here they are:

      1. We, the Government, need massive amounts of information to do our job, but you must not question specifically why we do or how we are going to use it. "The King, by the Grace of God, knows best".

      2. This information collected is "harmless". But not so harmless that just anyone is allowed to see it.

      3. We have no way of knowing how vulnerable these secret methods of analysis are to the Garbage-in/Gospel-out system of reporting. If it turns out that money-laundering front businesses have a statistical blip of being located within a 30-meter radius of ice cream stores, for example. People often forget that sometimes the more you know, the less accurate your knowledge can become. One of the great ironies of one of the more publicly-available government resources on terrorism was that it was only keyed to the "Fox News" spelling of "Usama" bin Ladin's, name. The actual arabic letter in question can be read as "o", "u", or even "w", but most popular sources transliterate it as "Osama".

      4. Our system of Checks and Balances is at work. Except that in this particular case, all of the checks and balances are operating in secret, so we can only assume they work. Trust Your Government.

      The USA has been since its founding predicated on the idea that a well-informed populace is an essential component of democracy. Benjamin Franklin was a printer. More than once in the succeeding years we've seen examples of why secrecy is the antithesis of democracy. Roaches flee the light. Now the Information Age is in full bloom and what do we see? Not more information for the people, but less.

      The question is, what are we going to do about this trend?

    9. Re:Is the costs of such surveillance justified? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      FFS, The Woolwich murder was *not* terrorism - it was murder, plain and simple. Terrorism is inciting fear in the masses in order to elicit a political change - did a single murder cause the masses to become exceptionally fearful?

      The originators of the term "terrorism", socialist and anarchist revolutionaries of the 19th century, focused on individual terror (i.e. killing specific people to deliver a message) over mass terror. Either one is terrorism, so long as it is done to promote one's political point of view.

  32. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by lendude · · Score: 4, Informative
    Well, just search for it - took me 5 secs.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Landsbanki_Freezing_Order_2008

    --
    "Get off the cross - we need the wood" - Tori Amos
  33. In another country, not so long ago, by vikingpower · · Score: 4, Insightful

    before mass prosecution of certain ( ethnic ) groups broke out, the government also told its citizens: "Ordinary German citizens in good standing have nothing to fear from GeStaPo or SD, which services are there to protect them".

    --
    Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
    1. Re:In another country, not so long ago, by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      before mass prosecution of certain ( ethnic ) groups broke out, the government also told its citizens: "Ordinary German citizens in good standing have nothing to fear from GeStaPo or SD, which services are there to protect them".

      Well, that is the problem isn't it? The National Socialist German Workers' Party didn't consider Jews to be ordinary German citizens.

      Mein Kampf - 1925/1926

      Germans, Buy only from the Jew! - by Joseph Goebbels - 10 December 1928
      Goebbels satirically suggests that Germans should only buy from the Jews.
      The title is a takeoff on a common Nazi slogan: “Germans: Don’t buy from the Jew!”

      Set out the Christmas tree. Daughters of Zion, rejoice! The good Germans are forging their own chains from their hard-earned coins. The Jewish financier will use them to impose eternal slavery on Germans. Who would not want to help advance world Jewry’s great benevolent work? Why do we have a neck, if not to bear a yoke? Germany has been for sale for ten years. Who does not want to help? Does anyone ask if the toy under the Christmas tree came from the Jew Tietz or the German Müller? The Jew will grow fat from the coins you give him, the German will starve. So what? Let the light shine on the Jews, let the Germans dwell in darkness. That is what the Lord of the Jews wants, as does his lackey Finance Minister Hilferding. Property is theft, as long as it does not belong to the Jew. Not a penny for the nobility, everything for the bank and stock exchange and department store swindlers!

      Christmas is the festival of love. Why should we not love the poor Jews, even make them fat? Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you! When was the Jew not our enemy? When did he not hate and persecute and slander and spit on us? Who would be inhuman enough to demand that we should treat him according to the law he applies to us: An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth?

      The child whose birthday we will soon celebrate came into the world to bring love. But Christ the man learned that one cannot always get by with love. When he saw the Jewish moneychangers in the temple, he took a whip and drove them out of the temple.

      Germans, buy only from Jews! Let your fellow citizens starve, and go to the Jewish department stores, especially at Christmas. The greater the injustice you do to your own people, the sooner the day will come when a man comes to take up the whip and drive the moneychangers from the temple of our fatherland

      Deutsche denkt daran!

      Anti-Jewish parade float - "Grumblers and Trouble-Makers go under the Roller"

      I assure you there is more if you go looking.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
    2. Re:In another country, not so long ago, by vikingpower · · Score: 1

      You slightly missed my point, or I formulated it badly. I wanted to make the point that government spying also, and systematically so, sought out individual, non-Jew German citizens who opposed the NSDAP ( Nazi ) party and Nazi politics. A priest could be thrown into jail without a warrant, and be tortured there, for something as simple as preaching against the Nazi party. I want to make the point that the setting is, now and here in Europe and the US, somewhat similar.

      --
      Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
  34. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by Fuzzums · · Score: 1

    Thanks. From there I'll search some more.
    Shocking how "terrorism" is abused for everything :(

    --
    Privacy is terrorism.
  35. It's a THREAT, he's THREATENING critics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    GCHQ using American Prism system to spy on British people is illegal. Snoopers charter was rejected. He knows this, its not legal. He's frightened, so he's threatening everyone trying to silence critics.

    Coded in those words, are the threat that if you complain, you will be viewed as a terrorist or a criminal. He's doing this ahead of facing the House of Commons, so they are a little scared to face him down. If you've ever been to the UK, you'll know how bad it is there. Creepy surveillance society with CCTV everywhere and everyone pretending to agree with it, lest they get targetted.

    You think you live in a democracy, that the people run the country by choosing representatives. Then you wake up one day, and the country is run by a secret government department in collusion with a foreign power. You can try and elect a new representative to overturn it, but anyone worthwhile will already be monitored and controlled. Anyone that might fix things, can never be allowed to dismantle their spying apparatus.

    WHY IS IT WRONG TO PROTEST THIS?

    The UK has the European rights written into law, the right to privacy is ENSHRINED IN LAW, without those rights we don't have a democracy.

    I notice we elected Cameron to dismantle this surveillance state, and he's had to bow to US pressure and so Snoopers charter came along. So what is my vote worth now? Nothing?

    1. Re:It's a THREAT, he's THREATENING critics by tibit · · Score: 1

      Creepy surveillance society with CCTV

      As someone who gets to watch CCTV footage every now and then, I'd say that's one of the things you should fear the least. The quality of CCTV footage universally seems to be anywhere between smooth crap and rough manure heap.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  36. It's the other way 'round actually by Jesrad · · Score: 2

    If I have nothing to hide then no one has legitimacy or even moral ground to stand on and spy on me.

    The proper way to find and punish criminal/terrorist activity is to first prove reasonable suspicion of crime THEN investigate by gathering incriminating evidence, and not the opposite of fishing for incriminating stuff then slap criminal intent on it hoping it'll stick.

    --
    Maybe we deserve this world ?
  37. Spies by Meneth · · Score: 1

    "Intelligence agencies" are spies, per definition. So... they should fear themselves, and each other.

  38. ok today = ok tomorrow?! by zimtmaxl · · Score: 1

    Let me add: things generally considered ok today may be viewed as not ok in the future.

    --
    how IT is changing the world - http://max.zamorsky.name
  39. Tories by joseph90 · · Score: 1

    Their minister for the environment does not believe in global warming either. So the UK is in good safe hands.

    J.

    1. Re:Tories by cold+fjord · · Score: 1
      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  40. European Convention on Human Rights by Stolpskott · · Score: 2

    Up until the Human Rights Act of 1998, which incorporated the European Convention on Human Rights into UK law, there was no legal right to privacy in the United Kingdom. There was some coverage in areas of legal and medical privacy under "Breach of Confidence" and related legislation around harrassment and data protection, but fundamentally the idea of "Privacy" is a very new one in UK law.
    To see a UK politician (not just that, but one of the top 5 members of the ruling Government) being so cavalier about surveillance by organisations which have no judicial oversight, and justifying it with the old saw "you have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide"...

    This is the same politician (William Hague) who, in a speech to the Conservative Party's annual political conference in 2001 (at this point, he was the party leader, and the Conservatives were the opposition party to the ruling Labour government of the time... the Conservatives are now the government, having formed a coalition with the Liberal Democrats after the last election) said:

    "I think Britain would be all right, if only we had a different Government.
    A Conservative Government that speaks with the voice of the British people.
    A Conservative Government never embarrassed or ashamed of the British people.
    A Conservative Government that trusts the people..."

    So now, the Government wants to know what the voice of the British people are saying, so they are willing to spy on them.
    The Government is either embarrassed by, ashamed of, or afraid of, the British people, so they are willing to spy on them.
    The Government is so mistrustful of the people, that they are willing to spy on them,

    And if there is any objection from the people, the response from the Government is "you only have something to fear if you have something to hide".
    Sorry Mr Hague, but as far as I know I have nothing to hide (disclaimer, I am not a UK lawyer with extensive and up-to-the-minute knowledge of all laws on the statute books in the UK). All the same, I personally object strongly to having my legally conferred right to privacy circumscribed to satisfy the voyeurism tendencies of some random idiot who feels like peeking.

  41. repost comments?? by gl4ss · · Score: 1

    so now if we don't have repost stories we have repost comments.

    in other news MI5 chief thinks MI5 is necessary, despite failures.

    you could have included the link about a guy getting shot. in the head. for merely looking foreign and running to work on the wrong day.

    --
    world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
  42. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by Grashnak · · Score: 4, Informative

    Oh good grief. They didn't declare Iceland to be "terrorist".

    They used a law called the Anti-Terrorism, Crime and Security Act (note how two of those three things aren't "terrorist") to freeze the assets of an Icelandic bank branch in the UK. They did so under provisions of the law that involve preventing actions harmful to the UK economy.

    One can certainly question whether this was warranted or not, but it had nothing to do with terrorism. Nice try though.

    --
    Life needs more saving throws.
  43. Wait, what? by Xest · · Score: 1

    I don't like the fact the Tories are currently pushing the snooper's charter and so forth either but your post is completely and utterly ignorant.

    Our previous left-wing Labour government bought in, or tried to bring in:

    - The intelligence modernisation programme, that was their version of the snooper's charter

    - A sweeping DNA database that held DNA of innocent people

    - RIPA, used by any public sector organisation such as councils to actively spy on people who do such trivial things as forget to pick up dog poo if their dog poos and they don't notice

    - The Digital Economy Act that allowed for web blocking, three strikes, and other measures, to allowably be enforced through monitoring of people's connections

    - A national ID card database

    - Stop and search powers for the police to arbitrarily stop and search people

    - Supported extraordinary rendition, secret courts, use of torture

    In contrast this government has limited DNA storage to actual criminals, ditched the DNA database, restricted use of RIPA the Lib Dem section of it at least, has thus far managed to block the IMP/Snooper's charter.

    This government is bad, but on the civil liberties front it's a thousand fold better than Labour were even now. FWIW I'm not a Tory or Labour voter, I couldn't ever trust Labour because they still support much of the above even now, and I hate the Tories because their leadership pays way way too much attention and gives way too much credence to the vocal 1/3rd or so of the party that are far right.

  44. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by sa1lnr · · Score: 1
  45. Sum of all fears by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 1
    I think what's happening is a kind of sum of all fears where the corruption of the prosecutor's office, political players and our knowledge of just plain old human nature is intersecting to produce a kind of sum of all fears in the monds of ordinary Americans.

    What if it's true that in a series of well suitably positioned individuals, some will, irrespective of previous screening, be unable to resist the ability to abuse this information for political or personal gain?

    What if the same is true at the level of an administration?

    What if it's true that people simply cannot live with the fact of this level of surveillance? I recall an old joke that went something like

    "How do you know it's going to be a bad day? When you wake up and see the 60 Minutes truck in your driveway.

    the deep implication of this joke is that , as Edward Snowden alludes to, everyone or at least most people in society are consciously or unconsciously afraid that some hand picked series of facts culled from the totality of their lives, suitably presented , will make them look guilty of something they never did.

    The belief is, guilt can be produced on demand. At any arbitrary future time, a series of revenge seeking "witnesses" can be produced to attest to whatever narrative the state wants to generate and the state can generate any narrative it wants through a process of selective culling and distortion of things you did and said and knowing who your enemies are.

    The only thing preventing this from being realized is the incapacity of the state to preserve and access the ultra fine details of your life .

    But now they have that.

    Could a Cheney resist this kind of power ? Did they when they went after Valerie Plame and Edward Wilson ?

    What if Cheney had this power earlier as he was aspiring to political power ? What kind of trail of destruction of other people's lives would he have left? Who would be in prison for life right now over something that never happened?

    We all know that people seeking revenge or power will stop at nothing. Witness the recent spate (!) of ricin letter framings , one by the framee's wife.

    A friend I have who is a lawyer claims that in at least 60% -70% of divorces where there are children, one spouse will try to accuse the other of molesting them . If there's a bomb you can drop on your enemy, you will.

    A lot of people cooling their heels in GITMO were put their through just this kind of petty revenge seeking on the part of local "informants".

    . People have deep and twisted motivations and especially it seems, with respect to revenge against real or perceived enemies, just ordinary people can justify anything; no one can be trusted.

    Some say this is what the Iraq War was really about- Bush tasking revenge in some primal macho way against Hussein for the plot against Bush Sr.

    Given human nature, the nature of politics and the "justice" system, the deep question is- can anyone be trusted with this power and also will other people accept the premise that there exists a system in which this power just can't be abused? If all that' s needed to destroy someone's life is the will and a near demented, perspectiveless prosecutor like Carmen Ortiz

    http://www.theatlanticwire.com/technology/2013/01/guide-finger-pointing-after-aaron-swartzs-suicide/61015/

    and anything goes for anyone at any time. \

    Just think how this could play out. "Kill em early" would be the slogan of the enfranchised against people who at age 15 or 18 or 25 fit the profile of "the enemy" and get targeted for selective "enforcement".

    I think that the answer to the question "will society accept this" (and really, can anyone be trusted with it) is- not without some kind of transparency the nature of which we have not yet invented. The problem is transparency is the opposite of stealth and need-to-know.

  46. What phone is most compatible with Tor? by jools33 · · Score: 1

    Right now it seems that Android, Microsoft, Apple are all signee's to PRISM, I've not heard anyone mention RIM yet - but I guess that's because they are Canadian and probably monitored under the Canadian governments jurisdiction. So what to consider when buying your next phone?
    Which phone is most compatible with Tor? Is there a Tor enabled phone?

    1. Re:What phone is most compatible with Tor? by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

      You would still have to go through the cellular network, and the phone would have to trust the carrier's CA, so really there is no such thing as security on a mobile phone. The carrier can still monitor all of your encrypted traffic. Here's a site that explains it pretty well. Employers do this all the time:

      http://theorylunch.wordpress.com/2013/01/24/ca-mitm/

  47. 'Law abiding citizens have nothing to fear' by rawler · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, this statement could just as well come from Teheran, Damascus, or Tripoli before the regime fell.

    I guess the interesting point is the definition of "law abiding citizen", now and in the future.

  48. Re:Mao, Stalin and Hitler all said the same. by EmagGeek · · Score: 1

    Only 1/3? You lucky son of a bitch...

  49. Only terrorists, criminals and spies? by dgharmon · · Score: 3, Informative

    "Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the intelligence agencies", William Hague

    `New research .. reveals that councils in Great Britain have authorised over 8,500 RIPA (Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act) operations in the past two years .. Authorities have used covert surveillance for reasons including spying on their own employees, dog fouling, people breaking the smoking ban and even the test purchase of a puppy'! link

    * Five authorities have used their powers to spy on people suspected of breaking the smoking ban
    * Suffolk County Council used RIPA powers to make a "test purchase" -- of a puppy
    * Bromley Council spied on a charity shop to see people "fly tipping" donations at their door

    * Investigation of unlawful plying for hire by private hire drivers

    * Trading Standards exercise investigating allegations of underage alcohol sales
    * Offences under Feed Hygiene Regulations
    * Noise nuisance
    * Alleged disabled blue badge fraud

    * Ascertain if person is walking their dog cleaning up after it but then depositing poop bag in trees, grass or on road
    * Carrying out graffiti ..

    --
    AccountKiller
  50. Does the UK have as many laws as the US by NotSoHeavyD3 · · Score: 1

    Since it's my understanding here in the US you can commit a crime with a penalty of 6 months in jail and a good size fine for simply picking up a feather.

    --
    Did you know 80 to 90% of the moderators on slashdot wouldn't recognize a troll even if one dragged them under a bridge.
  51. Only terrorists, criminals and spies... by ScRoNdO · · Score: 1

    Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies

    Just like only infidels, heretics and witches had to fear the Spanish Inquisition

  52. Not Possible by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

    It is not possible to be a "Law abiding citizen" in a country where there is a law for everything and ignorance of the law is no excuse. It's illegal for me to put the wrong kind of trash in the wrong container outside my home. They're now talking about putting sensors in my trashcans to detect their contents. I'm not kidding.

  53. Let's turn that argument on its head... by bwcbwc · · Score: 1

    Law abiding security agencies have no need to worry if the citizens have an understanding of what information is being gathered, from where, and why.

    --
    We are the 198 proof..
  54. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by cusco · · Score: 1

    Sounds like every major airline in the United States, really.

    --
    "Think about how stupid the average person is. Now, realise that half of them are dumber than that." - George Carlin
  55. End the root cause of the threats? by Leafwiz · · Score: 1

    Maybe if one analysed the root cause of the threats, and worked on those instead? Like the killings of middle eastern people in order to get their oil, or started thinking about how the central bank distorts the marked, making the prices go up with the consequence of people getting poor and angry. One would not feel the need to spy on everyone?

  56. Who decides what "law abiding" means? by jodido · · Score: 1

    Since the people who are doing the spying decide who's law-abiding, his assurances mean nothing. There are enough laws on the books to bring anyone--everyone--to trial. See the film "Sins of the Fathers" for an example, in this case how in the UK the innocent have nothing to fear. All you need to have done is roomed with, had a drink with, been in a study group with, someone the govt is going after and they'll be going after you too.

  57. Funny title. by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

    I thought the article was going to be about censo

    --
    I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
  58. nothing to hide by intermodal · · Score: 1

    Ah, the old "if you're not doing anything wrong, you have nothing to hide" argument. A sure sign that you can't trust someone is that you hear this from them.

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
    1. Re:nothing to hide by mark-t · · Score: 1

      And of course... it's a false proposition anyways, since there are definitely things that people will hide even though there's nothing wrong with them. Genitalia come to mind as a most obvious immediate example of this. They are not hidden because there is anything necessarily wrong with them, they are hidden simply because they are private. Building any sort of policy around the premise that if you have done nothing wrong you have nothing to hide is about as horrifyingly destined for disaster as what happened to the Jews during World War 2.

    2. Re:nothing to hide by intermodal · · Score: 1

      That's the best comparison I have come up with as well, though I usually try to avoid it because on the Internet, people howl and shriek about any mention of the Third Reich and completely miss the point of the discussion.

      --
      In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  59. Those who fail to study history.... by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    British Foreign Secretary on Surveillance Worries: '"Law Abiding Citizens Have Nothing to Worry About." Didn't a certain German Chancellor tell his people the same thing?

  60. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by tibit · · Score: 1

    And how is that bad? I'm all for staying as far away from totalitarian way of running a country, but man, this was one of the very few sane things that anyone did when faced with Icelandic insanity.

    For those who just don't appreciate what has happened in Iceland, let me give a condensed story. Iceland was a tiny nation of farmers and fishermen. Suddenly more and more people see themselves as bankers/investors, and the whole country gets converted to a hedge fund almost overnight. The Icelandic banks were issuing paper worth many times their national GDP (orders of magnitude more!) You have people who have no fucking idea of what they are doing turned investors. And I mean those were people who had no idea. You'd think of people with serious investment banking backgrounds - nope. They literally had no idea. They just found a niche and decided to exploit it, given all the free money available on the markets at the time. I mean, come on, their banks would do stuff like buy 10% interest in a major U.S. airline and refuse to even talk to anyone from the board. While all of this was borne by stupidity, it was all in effect criminal negligence executed on an astounding scale.

    Doing anything to prevent the country-turned-hedge-fund a.k.a. Iceland stealing any more money from abroad is a good thing in my book.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  61. Turnabout is fair play by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 2

    British Foreign Secretary on Surveillance Worries: '"Law Abiding Citizens Have Nothing to Worry About"

    The same could be said for governments, too. Maybe Britain would be willing to open up it's government records as a show of good faith?

  62. Definition of "terrorism" by Tastecicles · · Score: 1

    The threat and/or use of force to coerce political change.

    When the Government have the monopoly on force, when they have the monopoly on Justice, and when they have the monopoly on policy, they are the terrorists, yet to them the People become the enemy.

    Well, if we're to be damned, let's all be damned for what we are.

    --
    Operation Guillotine is in effect.
  63. Vote third party! by interkin3tic · · Score: 2

    Anyone who thinks third party voting is the cure to the problems the US is facing such as erosion of civil liberties, please explain to me why this is happening in Britain. Where they have more than two parties.

    1. Re:Vote third party! by interkin3tic · · Score: 2

      Just from yesterday:
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3843845&cid=43955011

      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=3842539&cid=43951973

      Numerous people on slashdot, reddit, and IRL seem to think that the only way anything in American politics is going to get better is if the number of choices increases from two to three or more, and the vast majority of them don't bother looking for evidence in any of the numerous countries with more than two parties.

    2. Re:Vote third party! by cold+fjord · · Score: 1

      I don't believe that, but I can explain it. Many people with a faulty understanding of the US Constitution and legal system become outraged about various things, such as this. They see that both major parties generally support it and mistakenly assume that it is because there is no difference between the parties - the Demicans & Republicats nonsense. From there they decide that a third party would solve the problem as they see it. That is the genesis of the idea.

      However, it is a fundamentally mistaken idea, and they would almost certainly be disappointed even if they elected a third party. The reason that the two main US parties have similar security policies is that neither party wants to be the party that lets suicide bombs and vehicle bombs become a regular occurrence in the United States. The voters will punish the party that lets that happen by voting the other party into power. Although Slashdot is thick with ignorance on the matter, both the US and UK have fairly frequent arrests of would-be terrorists that want to conduct a major bombing. Even if people on Slashdot tend to be ignorant of it, I doubt the politicians are. I expect that they get to see periodic summaries of arrests for terrorism, that sort of thing. Therefore, the two parties tend to take fairly vigorous stands about certain issues such as terrorism.

      There are other issues that tend to produce similar behavior in the parties as well, such as wanting to be reelected. They also need to seek support from donors to fund their campaigns. Once you get past that though the differences quickly accumulate on many topics. Even on national security policy, once you get beyond terrorism, which is a direct threat to voters, the parties can diverge significantly.

      A fair amount of this will apply to the UK as well. UK parties by and large don't want to be the party that can be blamed for the next 7/7. Once you get beyond the immediate physical security of the voters the range on policy questions will open up quite a bit. Some parties want to remove the UK's nuclear deterrent for example. The possible future nuclear blackmail of the UK 20-30 years in the future is a different question from voters being killed by a suicide vest wearing extremist this summer.

      Anyway, that is my take on it.

      --
      much of left-wing thought is a kind of playing with fire by people who don't even know that fire is hot - George Orwell
  64. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by tqk · · Score: 1

    It's the thief of Europe - at least everyone else is trying their best to pay back what they owe unlike Iceland that just outright stole and are now carrying on as if nothing happened because they bankrupted themselves and just refuse to ever pay back everything they took.

    Holy crap, Batman! 2008 was only five years ago, yet you've forgotten already?!?

    Iceland (along with the rest of the world) *finally* wised up to the fact that Wall St. was bundling crap mortgages (that never had a chance of being paid for) into investments that they flogged to every sucker willing to believe them. Iceland correctly viewed this as fraud and quit the game realizing the croupiers had it rigged.

    You're just jealous you didn't come to the same conclusion in time. Sucker!

    --
    "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
  65. Pot, meet kettle. by PPH · · Score: 1

    Ethical government agencies and employees have nothing to fear from a public examination of their methods and activities.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
  66. Something to consider? by Phizzle · · Score: 1

    The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable SEARCHES and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized... I know its considered radicalism to quote from the Bill of Rights, but here it is.

    --
    I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
  67. Who is a criminal? by brunes69 · · Score: 1

    There was a time in the 1800s where if you were a woman who defied your husband, you were a criminal.

    There was a time not to long ago, within many people's lifetimes in fact, that if you were a black american and went off the plantation, you were a criminal.

    There was a time even more recently where if you were a man having sex with another man, you were a criminal. In fact, in many US states this is still true.

    How is a society supposed to change, evolve, and grow when the government is acting as big brother into the lives of everyone? If this kind of surveillance had been around 200 years ago, then women would still not have the vote and blacks would still be slaves, because anyone who dared think otherwise would be caught and arrested.

  68. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by AmiMoJo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The Act was mostly about terrorism, so when it was voted on in Parliament if you opposed it you were supporting terrorism. They tacked that bit on and were careful to word it such that it didn't only apply to terrorism. The House of Lords actually picked up on that but were unable to fix it.

    It is a classic example of using terrorism to pass all kinds of bullshit into law by making it extremely difficult to oppose. We looked like complete dicks for using it against Iceland when it was clear to most people that that was never its intended purpose, or at least not the stated purpose of the Act when pitched to Parliament and the voting public.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  69. Next step by opus_magnum · · Score: 1

    is declaring everyone they don't like terrorists, criminals and spies.

  70. Illegal != Unethical by Theovon · · Score: 1

    One reason why we don't want ubiquitous surveilance is that we don't want law enforcement mining people's daily activities looking for new things to make illegal. This would be too easy to do. Is Mr. X politically inconvenient? "Well, let's see if he does something regularly that we can argue people shouldn't do, and see lots of people do this, and a statiscal analysis shows that this behavior has certain negative consequences." Now, we have a new law specially tailored to allow the arrest of this person they don't like.

    Another reason is that people do many "illegal" things that are not necessarily harmful or unethical at the time. If they weren't being monitored, they'd never be caught, because there are no consequences to anyone, so there would otherwise be nothing to trigger any investigation.

    In this digital age, having to get a warrant for every search impedes the efficiency of law enforcement. And that is exactly why we want them to have to get warrants. Otherwise, the sorting factor that keeps people in and out of our crowded and money-sucking prisons needs to be objective based on evidence of wrongdoing and an impartial judge and jury. If law enforcement can make anything a crime, then the sorting factor becomes subjective based on corruption and which people police officers and prosecutors like.

  71. Orwellian Justification by biggaijin · · Score: 1

    Statists who wish to pry into every detail of our lives ALWAYS use the same cop-out justification for their actions: (1) It makes everyone safer, and (2) If you don't have something to hide, you have nothing to worry about.

    The simple truth is that everyone has things happening in their life that they do not wish to broadcast. These things usually contribute nothing to public safety or welfare: It could be a discussion with a friend about cheating on a test, or a lie that you told one friend to protect another friend's feelings, or your own medical diagnosis of AIDS. Any responsibility the government feels to protect us does not give them the right to record every word we say, every move we make, every book or Web site we read, or every thought we think.

  72. The devil in the detail. by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    "Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies."

    Very true. The problem is that the intelligence agencies also get to decide who is labelled a terrorist, criminal or spy.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  73. Referencing the DDR? by MarkvW · · Score: 1

    You could have made exactly the same argument in the German Democratic Republic in 1974.

    We are watching you.

  74. iceland didnt take it, thats a flat out wrongness by decora · · Score: 1

    the handful of icelandic banks, which had controllers and boards and advisers of an international nature, went bankrupt, just like the US banks and just like the UK banks and just like the German banks.

    they all got bailed out. none of them are any more crooks than any others.

  75. how is that different from any other country? by decora · · Score: 1

    sorry these arguments about the 'exceptional evil in iceland' do not hold water. icelands banks had the same issues as goldman sachs, deutschebank, UK banks, etc. the same people were involved in some cases.

    1. Re:how is that different from any other country? by tibit · · Score: 1

      It wasn't exceptional evil, just wholly everyday stupidity, concentrated in one spot.

      --
      A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  76. Other than the name of a particular project... by aklinux · · Score: 1

    ...there's nothing new here. We've all been talking about how the government spies on us for decades. Anyone remember Carnivore?

    We all need to be doing more with encrypting our email. It's possible to do with pretty much any email client out there, even gMail. No, my email is not encrypted. I have set it up in the past to try it out, but it does no good to do it by yourself. All need to do it for it to be of any use.

  77. Re:Such as when they declared Iceland to be terror by tibit · · Score: 1

    The government had no way of covering it up even if they wished to. As I've said, they were in the hole many times their worth. At least in the almost-failed Euro countries, you've had debt on the order of GDP. In Iceland, GDP was a joke compared to what was lost.

    --
    A successful API design takes a mixture of software design and pedagogy.
  78. Foreign Secretary on Surveillance by TentativeFate · · Score: 1

    Has anyone else reading this wondered who the "Foreign Secretary on Surveillance" is, and why he's so worried?

  79. Must be true, the STASI and KGB also said it... by doccus · · Score: 1

    As the header said, if you have fine organizations like the Stasi and the KGB also saying "if you're not doing anything wrong, you should have noting to worry about".. then it must surely be true ;-) Besides, the Chinese *also* are very pleased with the direction the North American intelligence services are taking...

    1. Re:Must be true, the STASI and KGB also said it... by doccus · · Score: 1

      And oh, how could I forget.. the Nazis, when going door to door in WW2, also said this..furthermore, like the others, if you didn't let them in, and let them steal whatever valuables they wanted, you *must* have something to hide.. so they felt justified in raping the women, and stealing all the valuables in any house they chose, because "they must be doing something wrong, otherwise they wouldn't object". Welcome to the "New America".. just like 1930s Germany, or 20th century Soviet Union.. And soo many Americans (and Canadians) just rolled over for it, in the name of "protecting the citizens".

  80. Surveillance worries by BundyGil · · Score: 1

    Only terrorists, criminals and spies should fear secret activities of the British and US intelligence agencies. Ha!