I was very impressed with Tom Slater when I met him recently, and not only because he was about seven feet tall. He writes:
If you were under any illusions about the parlous state of
privacy in modern Britain, the Investigatory Powers Bill should have set you straight.
The
draft of the bill, published last Wednesday, sets out new and draconian powers
allowing the security services to monitor, access and store our online
communications data: IT and comms companies would be required to store
information on the websites we visit for up to 12 months, and release them to
the state when required; intelligence agencies would be given legal authority
to hack into communications and bulk-harvest metadata; and the ability of
companies like Apple and Google to encrypt individuals’ messages – putting
their content beyond the reach of themselves and the spooks – will be severely
curtailed.
Home secretary Theresa May has been
quick to talk down the measures.
She insists that the data retrieved from your
web history is no more than a ‘shopping list’ of the sites you visit, rather
than individual pages – a fine and utterly meaningless distinction.
And while
there has been much talk of the ‘safeguards’ guaranteed by the IPB, with
judicial commissioners required to approve requests for interception warrants
and wire taps, these are little more than formalities.
Judges will only be able
to reject Home Office requests on the principles of judicial review; as
backbench Tory MP David Davis pointed out,
‘This is not the judge checking the evidence, it is the judge checking that the
correct procedure has been followed’.
As part of a raft of
counterterrorism and security measures, including rules to vet speakers on university campuses
and censor broadcast media, the IPB continues a trend in Tory policy
that is as dumb as it is illiberal.
The IPB, we’re told, is meant to protect us
from ‘terrorists, paedophiles and other serious criminals’, but no ‘serious
criminal’ hatches bomb plots on Facebook chat or grooms children via Gmail.
They’re actually a bit smarter than that.
As we point out elsewhere on spiked today,
there are already popular and straightforward tools used by people around the
world to elude the security agencies.
Those with far more to hide would no
doubt have even more sophisticated ways of going about their business
undetected.
Even on its own terms, the IPB
simply won’t work. But, worse still, it puts everyone’s privacy in an even more
perilous position than it already was.
With CCTV on every corner and background
checks required in a range of professions, the IPB is set to colonise one of
the last enclaves of privacy in the modern world.
Though ministers in the
Commons, cribbing the old Goebbels-attributed mantra, have unnervingly tried to reassure us that ‘If you have nothing to hide, you
have nothing to fear’, the opposite is true.
The feeling that you might be
being watched is chilling to freedom, autonomy and human flourishing. But it was not so much the content
of the bill as the response to it that was most revealing.
Reading the
headlines, you’d think the IPB was the outrage of the century, but beneath the
bluster the criticism has been hushed and confused.
The Labour Party seems incapable of making up its mind.
Champion flip-flopper Andy Burnham first welcomed the proposals only to recant
and voice his ‘concerns’ a few days later.
And, while influential Labour MPs
like Keir Starmer have urged leader Jeremy Corbyn to accept the IPB as a ‘step in the right direction’,
the leadership is yet to come out on either side [the record of the present Leader speaks for itself, and the unions re already against; if this thing goes through, then thank a handful of irreconcilable Blairites more numerous than any Tory rebels].
Meanwhile, the bill’s
supposedly most ardent critics – such as the Liberal Democrats or
civil-liberties group Liberty – seem to be concerned only with whether or not
these new powers would receive proper judicial oversight.
‘At most, there is a
very, very limited role for judges in a rubber-stamping exercise’, said Liberty director Shami
Chakrabarti, in the dampest defence of privacy ever uttered.
What this half-cocked revolt against the government reveals
is that privacy today is seen purely as a negotiable commodity – something that
can be sliced up and traded off so long as there’s a threat and/or ‘transparent
mechanisms’ one can point to.
And this is the legacy of decades of legislation
that has painted the private sphere as a space for plotting, secrecy and abuse.
As Luke Gittos has argued before on spiked,
the various iterations of the Tories’ ‘snooper’s charter’ have only looked to
expand upon legislation that was established by New Labour over a decade ago.
But while such measures, drafted to tackle terrorism, have always proved
controversial, various other forms of state intervention into people’s private
lives have passed through parliament almost unchallenged.
That, in recent weeks, the Home
Office has talked-up the role of investigatory powers in catching paedophiles
and sex offenders is telling.
From New Labour’s introduction of CRB (now DBS) checks on individuals working with children
to Clare’s Law, a Coalition
government initiative that allows individuals to request the criminal histories
of their partners, the idea that those who have nothing to hide have nothing to
fear has been given official sanction time and again in recent years.
Indeed,
the crusade against private neglect and abuse has spun so out of control that
the Scottish parliament has felt bold enough to introduce the Named Persons initiative,
which will assign every Scottish child a state guardian until the age of 18.
At
every turn, this war on the private sphere has been met with either deafening
silence or legalistic quibbling from the so-called civil libertarians charged
with protecting our rights.
Privacy is a cornerstone of a free
society. It is the space in which we can retreat from public life, be intimate
with one another, develop our ideas and morals, and head out into the world
with confidence and vigour.
That is what is at stake if the IPB passed. And
that is what, in so many ways, we have already given up.
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