The Home Office ditched plans earlier this year for a central database tracking all phone, text, email and internet use. Instead ministers want internet service providers and phone companies to store this data for access by police and security services. The data includes who contacts whom, when, where and how – but not the content of what was said or written.
The Home Office summary of the responses to its consultation published shows that the internet and phone industry want assurances that they will be compensated for the costs involved and also fear technical problems.
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
News: UK Gov Plans to Snoop on Internet and Mobile Use Shelved
From the Guardian: a previously mooted £2bn surveillance project for keeping tabs of all British citizens' email, internet use, mobile calls and texts, is to be left out of the upcoming Queens Speech, laying out the legislative plans for the coming year:
Labels:
data mining,
databases,
internet monitoring,
law,
phone monitoring,
politics
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