Thursday, September 24, 2009

EU Funding New Database to be used to Identify 'Abnormal Behaviour'

From the Daily Telegraph: the EU is funding a 5 year project entitled INDECT (Intelligent information system supporting observation, searching and detection for security of citizens in urban environment) which aims 'to develop computer programmes which act as "agents" to monitor and process information from web sites, discussion forums, file servers, peer-to-peer networks and even individual computers' in order to identify so called 'abnormal' behaviour.

A number of interest groups have criticised the program:


Stephen Booth, an Open Europe analyst who has helped compile a dossier on the
European justice agenda, said these developments and projects such as Indect
sounded "Orwellian" and raised serious questions about individual liberty.
"This is all pretty scary stuff in my book. These projects would involve a huge invasion of privacy and citizens need to ask themselves whether the EU should be spending their taxes on them," he said. "The EU lacks sufficient checks and balances and there is no evidence that anyone has ever asked 'is this actually in the best interests of our citizens?'"

[Liberty's Shami Chakrabarti commented] "Profiling whole populations instead of monitoring individual suspects is a sinister step in any society. "It's dangerous enough at national level, but on a Europe-wide scale the idea becomes positively
chilling."

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