Fight against terror must mean the end of ordinary people’s privacy, says ex-security chief
Sir David Omand, Whitehall’s former and security and intelligence coordinator, called for unprecedented Big Brother powers to allow access to private details - including phone records, emails and travel information - to be given to the intelligence services.
Setting out a hugely controversial blueprint for the future of national security he said ‘moral rules’ about individual privacy would have to be broken.
His 17-page report calls for the creation of a vast state database to gather information about terrorist groups which are increasingly recruiting and operating online.
But he argued that a citizen’s right to privacy would have to be sacrificed to allow ‘intrusive’ intelligence techniques. More
Labels: Fight against terror must mean the end of ordinary people’s privacy, says ex-security chief
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]
<< Home