Big Brother Awards for Privacy Invaders 144
Dozix007 writes "The Register reports that the shortlist for this year's Big Brother awards for nasty privacy invaders has been released. The awards include: Worst Public Servant, Most Invasive Company, Most Appalling Project, Most Heinous Government Organisation and Lifetime Menace Award - now renamed the David Blunkett Lifetime Menace Award. Pressure group Privacy International, which organises the awards, said it was overwhelmed by nominations for Blunkett, the Home Office and national ID cards but they had been recognised in previous years."
I didn't believe I could win! (Score:5, Funny)
John Ashcroft
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:1, Informative)
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2, Informative)
Oddly enough, it still wasn't legal for the dead man's name to be on the ballots. To be on the ballot, one must be a resident of the state, to be a resident one must be alive.
LK
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:1, Insightful)
Spin has nothing to do with it. Ashcroft will go down in history as a guy who didn't do anything with the MS case or a person who had a hand in displacing and destroying civil liberties.
He didn't start us down the road, you fool, we were headed down that road for a long time; 9/11 was an opportunity to push that agenda. Much as Congressmen didn't want to vote against the Patriot Act right after 9/11, people get caught up in the situation, and that was the case in the senate race Ashc
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2)
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2)
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2)
There IS a lot of moral bankruptcy going around. I wish I could deny it. The things that puzzle me are the reasonably moral people who still support what the US is doing. Most people who support the govt. seem to really believe that supporting it is the right and proper thing to do. They can't explain it in any way that makes sense to me, so there's no way I can attempt to explain it to you, but believe me, it's true. And I really DON'T
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:5, Funny)
1. It's a British site, so you're not nominated.
2. Look up Matthew 25:12. I always get blamed for things I had nothing to do with....
God
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:3, Funny)
If that doesn't work, those cartoon trapdoors that lead straight to the hotplace are pretty funny. Let him hover a second or two over it so the paprazzi can get a nice wild take shot.
Ah just forget it. The devil would probably toss him back out the trapdoor for being a takeover risk.
Re:I didn't believe I could win! (Score:2, Funny)
2. Look up Matthew 25:12. I always get blamed for things I had nothing to do with....
God
Dear God,
Stop whingeing. If you're really God, you're omnipotent and can do anything you want. Clearly, you're an underachiever.
Website, Awards and Justice (Score:5, Informative)
I know... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I know... (Score:2)
We Need One of These for the USA (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We Need One of These for the USA (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.privacyinternational.org/bigbro
Re:We Need One of These for the USA (Score:3, Informative)
Bigbrother USA 2004 [privacyinternational.org]
Re:We Need One of These for the USA (Score:1)
Telemarketer Hell? Thats probably hotter than jay walker's hell but cooler than spamer's hell.
Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:5, Interesting)
They're all in public places, I have no expectation of privacy in a public place and I'm not committing any offences, it really doesn't bother me.
The nation ID card, OTOH, is a minor problem for the government - at last count almost 80% of population were against them and 30% said that they would go to prison rather than carry the card (Numbers subject to statistics).
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Stereotyped - probably, Flamebait - yes, but Insightful - barely.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Interesting)
You guys have cameras observing you every second that you're outside your home. Regardless of your justification, that's just wrong.
And you guys are worried about a national ID card? Jesus.. a bit schizophrenic, eh?
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:4, Interesting)
TV that doesn't suck (Score:2)
Oh, and everyone, it's fundraising time at WGBH [wgbh.org], which produces so many of those wonderful PBS shows. Please consider donating.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2, Funny)
That doesn't remotely make sense. And besides, big brother is a Channel 4 programme - they don't get any of the TV liscence money.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:4, Interesting)
What they do is monitor who buys TVs, and if someone buys a new TV that doesn't have a TV license, they pay them a visit. I know I had to give my name and address when I bought my TV and that was for TV licensing purposes (it isn't a tax, more like a mandatory TV subscription, the price isn't that bad now with several channels and radio stations, as well as the website and interactive stuff being paid by the fee, but 10 years ago the BBC was really badly managed financially).
For that, we get advert-free television that is meant to be politically unbiased. It doesn't have any pressures from advertisers at least. OTOH it sucks when you want to have a piss and there are no ad breaks.
The cameras aren't observing *me*. Yet. And they are only in city centres and shopping centres for the main part.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
At work we have received licence demands for the following:
A car park
An orchard
A barn
A storage cupboard
I love the BBC (Score:3, Interesting)
and let me take the opportunity to thank all of you Britons for pay this fee to keep the BBC around. As an American, I trust the BBC news more than any organization; especially for news about American.
Also I love fun comedies like The Office [amazon.com]. Jolly good show!
TV Detection (Score:2, Interesting)
Privacy for shut-ins... (Score:1)
They're all in public places, I have no expectation of privacy in a public place and I'm not committing any offences, it really doesn't bother me.
So, in the UK its ok for the government not to know where you are... as long as you never leave the house!?!
All I'm doing is using the Parent Post's logic...
-B
Re:Privacy for shut-ins... (Score:1, Interesting)
CCTV cameras (at the moment) aren't facially recognising people as they walk around. They are recording what's going on, and if a crime happens then the recording is replayed to help with the investigation. Also many cameras might be linked to a viewing room, just so that trouble can be identified and police dispatched quickly to the scene.
Now if face recognition systems were attached to the CCTV systems, or if it was used to find more than just crimi
Re:Privacy for shut-ins... (Score:2)
Now personally I don't like the speed limit laws anyway, but you should blame the laws and not the enforcement of them. I mean, the whole idea is that if a lot of people are speeding it's a dangerous location and therefore should be more heavily mon
Re:Privacy for shut-ins... (Score:2, Interesting)
Exactly. It only becomes evil if they take it one step further out, i.e., they identify a nice, long, straight, wide section of road, purposedly set a low speed limit fully knowing people aren't going to respect it, and then add automatic surveillance.
Re:Privacy for shut-ins... (Score:2)
Quantity and quality are not the same thing.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2, Insightful)
It's a question of scale. Yes, a police officer could have investigated you a century ago by following you through public streets. Would you be comfortable with a separate police officer assigned to every citizen, following you every day from the moment you leave your home?
That's the scale we're talking about now; there is no similar limitation of policing
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1)
Not for any meaningful definition of "monitored". While I agree they _could_ monitor every single person that appears on the camera, it is currently not feasible to pull off such a feat. It would require massive amounts of manpower (on such a scale as to totally dwarf DDR's STASI I would think) or else it would require computer algorithms that we simply do not have yet.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Insightful)
It's not unlikely in the very near future to see the system generating pathways of movement over time, linked to individual identifiers, tracked from camera to camera and purchase to purchase. The purchase-to-purchase tracking is already trivial to implement.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:3, Insightful)
Moreover, it proved so much useful (sic!) that it is no longer mandatory and is now replaced by the use of passeports, which are not mandatory to have, unless you want to travel outside the country.
In North-America, people use your driving license as an ID card. So can somebody explain why having ID cards is a problem in the first place, whatever kind of ID it is?
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
1) It is actually a tax - they intend to charge every man, woman and child in the country $100 for a compulsory card, and presumably another $100 if you lose it (My friend had to pay $50 for a new driving licence when hers was stolen)
2) Every criminal in the country will have any number of fake ones, but legit people will be harassed because they left the only one they have in their other handbag/wallet/why.
The biggest benefit is that the unemployment problem will be solved by
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
I think the main problem is they way the UK Government want to go about implementing the things.
Firstly although compulsary, I bet it wouldn't be the government who pay for it. I can just about stomach some sort of compulsary ID, but I draw the line at having to pay for yet another thing you have no choice in.
Secondly it's the privacy issues. Personally I quite like the idea of one solitary ID card being absolute proof of ID, rather than the current slew of various options, not all of which are accepted
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2, Interesting)
To identify thieves, and then completely ignore them, in the usual manner of UK police. (yes I've got clear CCTV footage of a theft including peoples' faces, no nothing was ever investigated)
And no, they don't track your every move unless you happen to be interesting|drunken|funny enough that they'll film you and show it on national television for
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:5, Insightful)
But nobody seems to realize it's a slippery slope, or at least nobody is talking about it. Governments, by their very nature, become more powerful and subsume the rights of individual citizens. Did it occur to you that your government decided they wanted mandatory national ID cards with biometric data after everyone so easily rolled over on the issue of nearly constant surveilance?
An equilibrium will be established between people's demand for individual rights and people's acquiescence of those rights under the (usually mistaken) belief that they will be more secure. The UK citizens have given up more rights than US citizens, but we're on the same path. The US Supreme Court recently decided that citizens can be required to identify themselves when asked by police officers, which reminds me of old movies with Nazis demanding, "Your papers please." Cameras are an increasing part of everyday life in the US. Not so much at the government level, although many urban intersections have cameras spying on us, nominally under the guise of traffic enforcement. But many businesses large and small are installing cameras that not only record images from the business property, but also in the public and private areas in the vicinity.
I value my privacy, and I resent the invasion of it. I DO have some expectation that I can walk down the street without my every move being recorded. And yes, I'm willing to surrender some degree of security, either real or imagined, for that modicum of privacy. I do NOT believe the government has the right to spy on me, simply because I'm not doing anything wrong. Universal surveilance seems to be based on the presumption of guilt. Why else would the government watch everybody, unless it's to catch the citizens whom it presumes to be guilty?
Crime has many complex social causes. It cannot be cured by restricting people's rights. At every point, the goverment assures the citizens, "If you just give up one more right, we'll make you safe." As soon as the citizens accept the loss of that right, there is the government asking for another. "If everyone would carry national ID cards with biometric data.... If only we had a national DNA database.... If only all citizens took government supplied mind control drugs...."
If fear of a criminal element is the lever used by government to obtain power from the people, why would anyone think the government will ultimately be successful in reducing crime? In the US, crime rates are highest in the areas where rights are restricted the most. Whether crime or the loss of rights came first is a subject of intense debate, but the correlation between crime and the loss of individual rights is not seriously debated by anyone. I think in most cases, a breakdown in the social fabric resulted in crime, then the government used people's fear of crime to restrict citizen's rights. But the loss of rights has certainly not resulted in lower crime rates. In many cases, the loss of some rights have resulted in a documented and obvious INCREASE in crime.
You want less crime? Invest in education and a fair and prosperous economy, then wait a generation. Short term fixes like registering citizens, heavy surveilance, and the general loss of rights are not the answer.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2, Interesting)
What I'd mind is if it was used proactively, e.g., for tracking people without their knowledge using face recognition systems. I believe a person has the right to go about their day without being tracked and logged in databases "Citizen #45932842 logged at Market Square 8:23:23" and so on.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:5, Interesting)
CCTV raised a lot of concerns when it was first rolled out, but now that it's here people seem to have accepted it - even more, people seem to appreciate it given the added sense of security and the positive effect on violent crime rates. Still, before we all get all warm and cuddly, we should remember that, at the end of the day, it's a system for surveillance of the general public. Just because the people jogging the joystick today aren't abusing it (it even caught that shocking bit of police brutality in Manchester a while back) doesn't mean the next bunch won't.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
My next of kin might care, but personally I think I'd prefer not being killed.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
They might tell you this, but this is actually impossible as there is no existent database that lists all insured vehicles. There cannot be, as "drive any vehicle" insurance is available, and you then don't have to notify them of the registration details of any vehicles you drive but do not own yourself.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:5, Insightful)
There is overwhelming public support for cameras in city centres. As a nation of Crimewatch viewers, Brits see cameras (rightly) as aiding their safety rather than as an evil gummit mind-control scheme.
Seriously, there's nothing like misplaced ideology to mess up a country's administration. An absolute right to privacy in public is every bit as bad for the general public as the police state is.
- Chris
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:4, Funny)
Now, come on... Britain in 1984 was not only a privacy-free surveillance state, it was completely cut off from the rest of Europe and locked into a destructive alliance with the United States. You're exaggerating things enormously here.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
no nO NO (Score:5, Insightful)
No, 1984 would require surveilance in the privacy of your own home, tracking your sexual habits, hobbies, et cetera. Keeping track of everywhere you go, your political opinions, and taking action against you for them. It will be 1984 when your television records YOU.
Crime (Score:2)
Re:no nO NO (Score:2)
OK, what if it's not my television, though? What if it's my computer? What if my web browser, my cookies, my SPYWARE starts tracking and compiling all of the above? What then? Does it have to be the government doing the tracking? What if the
Re:no nO NO (Score:2)
Cheers.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
If you aren't part of the solution, you're usually on the problem side.
Re:Privacy in the UK? (Score:2)
However this notion of "some crazy old persion decides" simply is wrong. "Modern" democratic monarchies aren't like that.
Seriously dude, the Queen in the UK has basically nothing to do with running the country. This has been the case for longer than the USA has been in existence. She's also got nothing to do with running the other countries she's Queen of, which includes Australia, Canada, and India. If you understood anything about the
Spoilt for choice... (Score:4, Insightful)
Just a thought... (Score:5, Funny)
I wonder if you have to give them your real name.
Re:Just a thought... (Score:2)
Re:Just a thought... (Score:1)
This seat reserved for: Richard Cranium
"Hey, you're in my seat!"
John not winston? (Score:2)
--
Spread them around! (Score:4, Interesting)
The Title (Score:3, Funny)
What's wrong with this title, people?
"Hello, Big Brother? I'd like to report YOU! Oh, hang on, there's somebody at my door."
whois david_blunkett (Score:4, Informative)
Re:whois david_blunkett (Score:5, Informative)
Think of it this way - you have lots of functions that are carried out by various ministries - the MoD looks after Defence, the Foreign Office sorts out diplomatic affairs (and intelligence agencies), Dept of Health looks after the NHS, etc., etc.
Anything that is left over, goes to the Home Office. This includes all law enforcement (at all levels), part stake in MI5, and anything else nobody else is prepared to take responsibility for. It is a MASSIVE department, dwarfing every other UK government department.
Blunkett, whilst in charge of the Home Office has introduced some interesting laws. Nearly all of them specifically remove civil liberties from the UK citizen, and he has announced an ID card that will eventually replace driver's licenses, passports, etc. and will carry biometric data. A corresponding matchup of the data is held on government computers, it's use is ill-defined, in short, it's a hideous idea that is being lobbied for by a company that stands to make a lot of money out of it.
Re:whois david_blunkett (Score:2, Informative)
David Blunkett. British politician, now in charge of Homeland Security for the U.K. I'm sure that in spirit it would be translated to the "John Ashcroft Lifetime Award" for U.Sians, but the position Blunkett holds is probably more akin to Tom Ridge's.
David Blunkett isn't quite John Ashcroft's opposite number (he's Home Secretary, as opposed to Attorney General [wikipedia.org]). However, he does sometimes seem to think he's a judge [bbc.co.uk].
The reason Blunkett is recognised by this award is that he's trying to introduce a compul
list of co's/orgs that sell your info to marketers (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:list of co's/orgs that sell your info to market (Score:4, Interesting)
I've always been suspicious of that opt-out crap, too. Like all the spam mail that says "click here to be (re)moved from the list". Removed from one list, added to another.
Your mistake: (Score:3, Interesting)
Never give a charity with no purpose your address.
I once gave my address to The March of Dimes Foundation, but that was a mistake [kuro5hin.org].
At present, the only charity with my current address is the local NPR affiliate, and they haven't abused it to my knowledge.
Re:Your mistake: (Score:1)
Hell, they almost lost the whole org to a board take over [csmonitor.com] led by former leader of Greenpeace, Capt. Paul Watson.
It's a pickle... (Score:1)
there's no doubt about it. Nonprofits exist to give a collective voice and purse to a group of people who would otherwise be mute or dependent on patronage.
I don't know what to do about it, except not donate. Various groups exist that track overhead spending by nonprofits, and more than a few nonprofits seem to exist solely for the purpose of employing their executives, which to me is a complete violation of trust. Unfortunately, there's nothing anyone can do but withdraw their support.
So I have a pers
Re:It's a pickle... (Score:1)
Re:list of co's/orgs that sell your info to market (Score:1)
" Nettle vs. Aclu Part 1 [nettle.com]", "Part 2 [nettle.com]" AND "Part 3 [nettle.com]"
An excerpt from "Nettle vs. ACLU"
even the ACLU ?? (Score:3, Informative)
If you pick your jaw up off the floor and keep reading through the tears, a bit further down it says:
That probably doesn't qual
Most Invasive Company - LloydsTSB ? (Score:5, Insightful)
The article does not explain under what circumstances the bank requires this, perhaps to open an account.
So why is this invasive? Would the judges rather have the bank naively believe anything a potential con-artist tells them over the phone?
In this age of identity theft, this might be a bank to consider. Apparently, they take a persons true identity seriously.
Re:Most Invasive Company - LloydsTSB ? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Most Invasive Company - LloydsTSB ? (Score:2)
Oh, the irony.
Re:Most Invasive Company - LloydsTSB ? (Score:2)
The article does not explain under what circumstances the bank requires this, perhaps to open an account.
Well, let's analyze it just based on the words used. People who haven't opened an account yet aren't "customers" of the bank until they've opened an account, and demanding that new account applicants provide ID is hardly something that'd qualify for a "most invasive company" award. To judge by the wording, i
Re:Most Invasive Company - LloydsTSB ? (Score:1)
Ok, one question ... (Score:5, Funny)
Contenders for Worst Public Servant are Margaret Hodge for her support for a database of children and "good behaviour" orders for children as young as eight.
So, how come Santa Claus is not on the shortlist? Let's put that #1 record keeper in the world on a list for a change. Let's see how he likes the taste of his own medicine!
Re:Ok, one question ... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Ok, one question ... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Ok, one question ... (Score:2)
(mirror here [1asphost.com] and maybe here [tripod.com]))
Re:Ok, one question ... (Score:2)
Publicly proclaiming his existence is a violation of federal law and is punishable by something weally weally baddd.
Re:Ok, one question ... (Score:2)
Actually he does exist, and based on comments from Linus Torvalds. . . Santa Claus is one hell of a coder!
And the winner of the irony award... (Score:3, Insightful)
I think they should take a look in the mirror.
Re:And the winner of the irony award... (Score:2)
Re:And the winner of the irony award... (Score:2)
Hence the phrase "book early to avoid disappointment".
National ID card? (Score:2, Interesting)
Not trolling, I always wanted to understand your point of view about this.
Re:National ID card? (Score:2)
Re:National ID card? (Score:2)
The major problem is that there is no good reason for introducing ID cards. The Home Office makes arguements in favour that do not stand up.
Briefly, they won't prevent terrorism, they won't prevent benefit fraud, it won't cut down on illegal work
You are overrating parts of anglosaxon law system (Score:2, Interesting)
The basis of UK law is that everything is permitted unless specifically prohibited (reverse is true in many countries)
This was even truth in comunistic countries. I agree that this was (probably) inventeted in UK as a rule, but it is common thing in most of the even semicivilized (read: dictatorship countries) world
UK invented many of things in legal systems that we take for granted, but you should be aware that nothing lasts forever! For i
Re:You are overrating parts of anglosaxon law syst (Score:3, Interesting)
For instance, UK legal system does not allow you to go to second instance court in many cases - which is, from continental point of view, serious abuse of human rights (IIRC, if you are trialed by jurry, you can't complain to their decision; they allowed this recently, but only in some extremely rare cases).
Er, well, whilst it is true that in the UK you cannot appeal on a question of fact (ie you cannot appeal the jury's decision on guilt or innocence) you can certainly appeal on a question of law. So
The real big brother awards link... (Score:4, Informative)
Blunkett (Score:2, Insightful)
He deserves a special prize for his efforts to increase state control and reduce individual liberty and privacy.
Privacy invasion? (Score:4, Insightful)
The alternative is to not have mod points and although most people don't agree with the odd moderation, they are a great way to filter out the idiots.