The British public could be fitted with computerised ID tags within 10 years
as we silently submit to living in an increasingly intrusive society.
This was the stark warning outlined in
a
report, A Surveillance Society, produced for the Office of the Information
Commissioner, which looks at surveillance in 2006 and projects forward ten years
to 2016.
Presenting the report, produced by
the Surveillance
Studies Network, Commissioner Richard Thomas warned we have already
unwittingly let our lives be tracked by visible and invisible means.
"Two years ago I warned that we were in danger of sleepwalking into a
surveillance society. Today I fear that we are in fact waking up to a
surveillance society that is already all around us," he said.
This includes systematic tracking and recording of travel and use of public
services, automated use of CCTV, analysis of buying habits and financial
transactions, and the work-place monitoring of telephone calls, email and
internet use.
Moreover, we can expect technologies to be used more extensively and
routinely to track our everyday movements and habits. The report warned that by
2016 almost every movement and purchase made would be tracked by linked
surveillance technologies such as RFID.
For example shoppers could be tracked through unique RFID tags embedded in t
heir clothes; cars linked to global satellite navigation systems will allow
agencies such as the police to track selected cars more closely.
The report also said employees could be subject to biometric and psychomet
ric tests and jobs refused to those who are seen as a health risk or don’t
submit to the tests.
The report mirrors a 2005 National Consumer Council report, The Glass
Consumer, which also said growing use of personal data from credit cards to
mobile phones for commercial purposes is undermining individual privacy.
Hoping to spark a public debate about the pros and cons of surveillance
technologies Thomas said: "It's not just unwarranted intrusions into privacy;
it's also the dangers of inaccurate information, of mistakes being made, of
information being held for too long."
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