The United Kingdom Authorizes Broad Mass Surveillance on Its Citizens
A level of snooping every autocrat in the world will admire.


The United Kingdom's Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority is not part of an agency tasked with fighting terrorism. They are a licensing body monitoring labor rules in the U.K.'s agriculture industries.
Nevertheless, under a new mass surveillance law, high-ranking officials of this agency will have as much access to the private Internet information of British citizens as agencies that actually are tasked with fighting terrorism.
This will be the outcome of the passage of the Investigatory Powers Act, also known as the Snooper's Charter. It has passed both houses of the British Parliament and will become law in 2017 if approved by the queen.
The Investigatory Powers Act makes the surveillance authorized by America's PATRIOT Act look remarkably tame in comparison. The law requires Internet Service Providers to keep all metadata and web browsing history of users for 12 months. And it allows top officials of dozens of government agencies to demand access to this information, not to fight terrorism, but any sort of crime.
The list of agencies granted access included in Schedule 4 of the 300+-page law includes several government bodies whose job it is to fight various forms of fraud or general crimes. It contains rules on how to get warrants to access confidential information stored by journalists and to try to track down a journalist's sources. It, of course, creates special protections for members of Parliament to provide extra requirements before snooping on them.
This is not a law about fighting terrorism. This is a law that completely destroys citizens' online privacy for the benefit of any sort of governmental investigation to solve domestic crimes. Edward Snowden called it "the most extreme surveillance in the history of Western democracy."
This was a pet project of new Prime Minister Theresa May, and I've previously noted that she is absolutely awful on surveillance and privacy, going so far as to think that snooping on private communications is an acceptable way to fight "cyberbullying."
People are now petitioning to try to force the House of Commons to reconsider the legislation.
At the same time this domestic surveillance law is being passed, the U.K. is also considering a bill adding additional restrictions to the availability of online pornography. The law's stated purpose is to demand age checks to access porn sites, but a clause would potentially ban portrayal of certain types of "non-traditional" sex acts, meaning the kinky stuff, like spanking, female ejaculation, and anything that looks non-consensual (even though it's just role-playing). It doesn't take a brain surgeon to see the very, very bad ways that these two laws could intersect.
Ron Bailey previously noted how Russia is using surveillance laws like those in the U.K. and the United States as models for their own. The Investigatory Powers Act is an autocrat's wet dream. Laws exactly like this one will be used in other countries to snoop and crack down on dissenters and protesters, and the United Kingdom will hardly be in a position to criticize.
And if President-Elect Donald Trump's choice to head the CIA—Rep. Mike Pompeo—is an indicator, America may be following in England's footsteps.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I posted this a week ago. Where's my HT?
I got your hat tip fight here!
or right here. whoops.
Now we have to fight for the tip? Kinky.
All posts on this site are nothing but fodder for Shackford's ascent to power.
I posted it before you, but you didn't give me an HT. Serves you right!
"The law requires Internet Service Providers to keep all metadata and web browsing history of users for 12 months. And it allows top officials of dozens of government agencies to demand access to this information, not to fight terrorism, but any sort of crime."
And if you have nothing to hide....
RIP privacy
Manners maketh man.
SugarFree...BANNED IN THE UK!!!!
Actually that has been the case since 2003 when Elizabeth II invoked the Royal Prerogative to ban him specifically from entering the country or disseminating his work there.
I knew all those spotted dick jokes would come back to haunt me.
Winston's mom is also haunted by spotted dick.
Luckily, the UK population has been pretty much disarmed, so this transition will be smooth.
Theresa May is the most British looking person I've ever seen.
Not This guy
And France has laws that prohibit talking about illegal drug use in a 'positive light'. Expect Sessions to study it.
Europe is fucked.
Libertarian moment over there.
FIFY.
You know who else authorized broad mass surveillance...
My mother?
John?
Wait, you said "broad mass" not "massive broad." Never mind.
Well, John is a government lawyer in some capacity. You never know.
When are they going to close the coffee shop loophole?
Are there third party hosts that will browse on your behalf so that your record is just one boring URL?
Again? It wasn't that long ago they were advocating a camera inside every home and refrigerator inspections. I think they have that to some degree already.
What the hell is left to look at?
Well, they never actually got those cameras and refrigerator inspections.
And it can always be worse.
This will work well with all those security cameras Britain has.
Hey Britain, the book "1984" was suppose to be a warning, not a how to.
This will work well with all those security cameras Britain has
The only time those security cameras were useful for anything was in "Skyfall".
It, of course, creates special protections for members of Parliament to provide extra requirements before snooping on them.
Finally, leadership who understand the negative effects of overbearing surveillance.
I guess the old expression "Crawl up their ass with a microscope" isnt a euphemism after all.
You probably mean Gladys Kravitz, not Helen Lovejoy.
I'm having another one of my sick headaches!
Where were you when the government put CCTV on every block?!
I know this would probably make the UK system crap a brick, but it would make things interesting if the Queen were to withhold assent
Her Majesty doesn't want to get caught reading sugarfree's blog.
This is what happens when you get rid of hereditary peerages. I thought the House of Lords was supposed to restrain some of this shit.
Keep in mind the US and the UK have a very close relationship in terms of sharing information. Information that is uncovered in one country about the other countries citizens are often shared. considering many sites have mirrors all over the world or are located outside the countries they serve information often travels all over the world.
How does this work with TLS? The ISP can't actually see the contents of the communications beyond IP address / domain name.
They'd either have to ban secured connections (very unsafe), or force people to use a custom CA letting the ISP do a man-in-the-middle (almost as bad).
They force it on the hosts - the hosts have to maintain all user visit data so that the UK gov can demand it at any time - domain name tells you where traffic went to, thugs digging through company server records tells you the rest
Why do we send troops to every dirtbag failed country on the planet in order to "free them from tyranny" (and then install a dictator if we win... but that's another story), but we're just standing by and watching Great Britain turn into exactly what Orwell warned them about? It's time for a real war for freedom; boots on the ground, bunker busters, drone strikes, "interrogation" centers (complete with waterboarding and those little hand-crank phone generators). LET'S ROLL!!!!!
So my midget clown transvestite pen is safe, right? tIt's not kinky if enough people like it.
More serious, I'm sure gay butt sex is ok, but straight butt sex its obviously not ok. Straight people are appropriating their sex acts!
Kiss Britain goodbye.
It's hard to take the British serious in any way shape or form at this point ...It's been a long curious fall for those once mighty island folk
I Quit my office-job and now I am getting paid 99 USD hourly. How? I work over internet! My old work was making me miserable, so I was forced to try something different, 2 years after...I can say my life is changed-completely!
Check it out what i do:===> http://www.works76.com
Facebook gives you a great opportunity to earn 98652$ at your home.If you are some intelligent you makemany more Dollars.I am also earning many more, my relatives wondered to see how i settle my Life in few days thank GOD to you for this...You can also make cash i never tell alie you should check this I am sure you shocked to see this amazing offer...I'm Loving it!!!!
=====================> http://www.homejobs7.com