Well worth reading both in itself and for the barking mad comments underneath it (I felt right at home; you know who you are), Alan Rusbridger writes:
Towards the end of last year Tom Stoppard gave a
rather brilliant PEN/Pinter lecture on freedom of expression which was, in
part, a kind of love letter to the place which has been his home since 1946:
‘There is no country in the world I would rather be living in, no country where
I would feel safer.’
Later in the same lecture he listed his own
‘obsequies over the England we have mislaid’.
The list began: ‘Surveillance, mis-selling pensions and insurance. Phone hacking. Celebrity culture. Premiership football. Dodgy dossier. Health and Safety. MPs’ expenses…’
And so on, before underlining his own personal mantra on human rights: ‘A free press makes all the other freedoms possible.’
The list began: ‘Surveillance, mis-selling pensions and insurance. Phone hacking. Celebrity culture. Premiership football. Dodgy dossier. Health and Safety. MPs’ expenses…’
And so on, before underlining his own personal mantra on human rights: ‘A free press makes all the other freedoms possible.’
I found myself nodding at all three themes of the
lecture. I too can think of no country in which I’d rather live. There are
things happening in the country which are dismaying, if not positively
alarming.
And no freedom is possible without a free press.
And no freedom is possible without a free press.
It had not struck me that these positions could
be thought incompatible until about ten minutes into an appearance before the
Commons Home Affairs Select Committee a few weeks later when the chair, Keith
Vaz, asked me: ‘Do you love this country?’
One paper reported the question caused me
‘visible discomfort’. I was certainly surprised. Was it really unpatriotic to
believe in the necessity of a strong intelligence service; to be deeply
concerned at some aspects of its operations; and to assert the duty of
journalists to stand aside from power in order to scrutinise it?
In America, the Snowden revelations have stirred
up a momentum for reform that crosses political divides. Fox News and the
libertarian right have made common cause with liberals to push back on mass
state data collection and storage which they view as potentially dangerous and
unconstitutional.
The right in Britain has so far been more muted.
The Conservative members of the Home Affairs Select Committee showed zero
interest in any of the issues that have surfaced over recent months, preferring
to try to prove criminal behaviour by the Guardian — or exposing at the
very least a possible breach of s8 (16) of FedEx’s terms of carriage.
One
tweeter was impelled to ask: ‘What would Conservative giants, like Burke,
Disraeli, Churchill, think of the today’s minnow Tories talking about FedEx
parcels not liberty?’
Before the last election it was, notably, Tory
MPs and peers — together with many Lib Dems — who spoke up for liberty and
against an overweening surveillance state.
David Cameron, Chris Grayling and
Dominic Grieve all forensically dissected Labour proposals for building ever
bigger state databases.
David Davis, Dominic Raab and Rory Stewart are among
the current crop of Conservatives who do keep a watchful eye on the formidable
technologies now deployed.
When Parliament has recently been given the opportunity
to vote on potentially intrusive behaviour by the state — as with the so-called
Snoopers’ Charter — it has consistently rejected it.
But there is something about the incantation of
‘national security’ that turns heads and extinguishes debate.
In the same week
as Stoppard’s fierce defence of a free press a respected former editor of the Independent
wrote a piece under the headline: ‘If MI5 warns that this is not in the
public interest, who am I to disbelieve them?’ — which might actually be a useful
question for first-year journalism students.
The former editor would not, he
said, have published the Snowden disclosures. Other British journalists have
simply avoided the subject altogether.
I do not, incidentally, believe the frowning
disapproval of those who vow they would never have touched the stuff.
It is
unimaginable to me that any editor I have ever known would actually have
declined to look at any of the Snowden material or — having looked at it —
would have voluntarily taken a Black and Decker to their own computers and
published not a word.
It’s been suggested to me that the widespread
silence — in the UK, but nowhere else: the rest of the world is in
the midst of bubbling debate — reflects a general crossness with the Guardian
over Leveson.
The Guardian washed Fleet Street’s phone-hacking
laundry in public. That led to Leveson. Leveson was bad. Therefore…
But I also find that hard to believe, if only
because the British press as a whole is currently trying to persuade sceptical
politicians and the public that it can be trusted to regulate itself.
If our
editorial leaders can’t distinguish between journalism that needs to be
defended because it is of public importance and journalism in which there is no
public interest, then self-regulation cannot possibly succeed.
It seems more likely that some people can’t get
beyond a straight binary choice between privacy and security. Even this
acknowledges that there are at least two competing public interests which must
be weighed by someone.
But as the Snowden disclosures have continued, it’s
become apparent that there are several significant issues which need to be
added to be considered and balanced. Here are some of them:
Consent. Should citizens be allowed to
know about the new technologies which have been deployed since the beginning of
this century to collect, store and analyse every byte of their digital lives?
Parliamentary approval. Should MPs have
had a say before these new mass databases and collection techniques were
implemented?
Legality. Most of the laws under which
this activity happens were passed in an age of crocodile clips and copper
wires. Is it right that analogue laws should be stretched to cover digital
spying?
The private sector. Much intelligence
nowadays piggy-backs on the capabilities of private technology and telecom
companies.
How many of these companies went beyond what they were legally
required to do? Do their customers and shareholders have a right to know how
their information is shared behind users’/subscribers’ backs and on what legal
(or voluntary) basis?
The integrity of the web itself. There is
evidence that the basic security of the digital platforms used by all of us has
been weakened for the benefit of the NSA.
Cryptologists, business leaders and
privacy experts have been appalled to learn about what the NSA and GCHQ have
been up to. Do Sir Tim Berners-Lee’s views on the web count as much as the
spies’?
The risk to the digital economy. US and UK
digital entrepreneurs are gravely concerned at a potential backlash against
western tech companies which, it’s estimated, could cost them tens of billions
of dollars over the next few years.
Relationships with friendly governments and
institutions. The US has also promised to stop spying on other allies
through membership of some international civil institutions. When is it right
to spy on our friends — and do we mind when they spy on us?
Has everyone in the intelligence agencies told
the truth and behaved legally within their own frameworks? Several members
of Congress doubt this. Declassified documents released from the Fisa courts
show repeated violations by the NSA.
The recent Gibson report on rendition
implied that our own agencies had been less than frank with Westminster’s
Intelligence and Security Committee. The former Master of the Rolls, Lord
Neuberger, found in 2010 that MI5 had deliberately misled Parliament and had a
‘culture of suppression’ that undermined government assurances about its
conduct.
Privacy. The collection of billions of
digital and telephonic events a day represents the most staggering potential
invasion of privacy in history.
Security advocates paint this in a benign
light, saying that it is merely ‘metadata’, which they compare to old-fashioned
phone billing records. Privacy experts vigorously dispute this and say that
metadata gives a near-complete picture of an individual’s life.
What are the
implications for medical, financial, journalistic, legal and sexual records and
general individual privacy?
Proportionality. Is there convincing
evidence that bulk data collection and storage is necessary and proportionate?
Security chiefs insist yes.
At least three US intelligence oversight senators
say they haven’t seen such evidence. Ditto a federal judge. President Obama’s
own review panel expresses outright scepticism.
There is, finally, the question of security of
information. Giant American databases have quite spectacularly leaked twice
in the past four years (Manning and Snowden).
Given that it appears to be
impossible to keep the state’s most secret secrets secure, why should we trust
any state database with our most private information?
So there are many interesting and important
issues now revealed. We currently rely on secret courts and secret committees.
But how can voters judge how well they’ve addressed the issues listed above —
if (in some cases) at all?
Just before Christmas the story took two
remarkable turns.
First, a (Bush-appointed) judge in Washington found that the
NSA’s ‘almost Orwellian’ mass collection of Americans’ data was probably unconstitutional.
The next day Obama’s own review panel came out with a list of 46 sweeping
reforms of the NSA, and all the leading US tech companies had a meeting with
Obama to express their alarm at what they were learning.
Snowden himself is not a liberal but a
libertarian conservative.
He had come to have grave fears about the potential
power of the state power for what he termed ‘suspicionless surveillance’.
He
had little confidence that politicians were being fully and honestly informed
about that power — or that they were adequately equipped for the role of
oversight.
And so he went to a free press in order to blow the whistle.
The former Conservative chief whip Lord
Blencathra (David Maclean as was) said of Snowden in October: ‘He is the first
leaker I have ever felt sympathy for or felt had a potential justice behind
what he was doing.’
Maclean felt he’d been kept in the dark while scrutinising
the parliamentary scrutiny of the data communications bill.
Last week the
libertarian blogger Guido Fawkes described Snowden as a hero and demanded a
pardon.
Slowly, it seems, British conservatives are waking up to the
significance of the issues at stake.
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