By Neil Mackay
IT is a chilling, dystopian account of what Britain will look like 10
years from now: a world in which Fortress Britain uses fleets of tiny
spy-planes to watch its citizens, of Minority Report-style pre-emptive
justice, of an underclass trapped in sink-estate ghettos under constant
state surveillance, of worker drones forced to take on the lifestyle
and values of the mega-corporation they work for, and of the super-rich
hiding out in gated communities constantly monitored by cameras and
private security guards.
This Orwellian vision of the future was compiled on the orders of the
UK's information commissioner - the independent watchdog meant to guard
against government and private companies invading the privacy of
British citizens and exploiting the masses of information currently
held on each and every one of us - by the Surveillance Studies Network,
a group of academics.
On Friday, this study, entitled A Report on the Surveillance Society,
was picked over by a select group of government mandarins, politicians,
police officers and academics in Edinburgh. It is unequivocal in its
findings, with its first sentence reading simply: "We live in a
surveillance society." The information commissioner, Richard Thomas,
endorses the report. He says: "Today, I fear that we are, in fact,
waking up to a surveillance society that is already all around us."
advertisementThe academics who compiled the study based their vision of
the future not on wild hypotheses but on existing technology,
statements made about the intentions of government and private
companies and studies by other think tanks, regulators, professional
bodies and academics.
The report authors say that they believe the key theme of the future
will be "pervasive surveillance" aimed at tracking and controlling
people and pre-empting behaviour. The authors also say that their
glimpse of the future is "fairly conservative. The future spelled out
in the report is nowhere near as dystopian and authoritarian as it
could be."
Here's how 2017 might look...
BorderGuard The Jones family are returning to Britain from holiday in
America. "It's hard to know the difference between the two countries by
what the family experience at the border," say the Surveillance Report
authors. Britain, America, all EU countries and all members of the G10
have outsourced their immigration and border control services to
massive private companies. In this vignette, the futurologists give the
company the name BorderGuard.
Thanks to the never-ending war on terror, these governments have
developed "smart borders" using hidden surveillance technologies.
Cameras and scanners at passport control monitor faces, irises and
fingerprints checking them off against records of biometric passports,
or the British ID card system. BorderGuard has access to state and
transnational databases and can also data-mine information on
individuals - such as consumer transactions - via a paid-for service
provided by specialist companies trading in information held on every
individual in the land.
For families like the Joneses, crossing borders is relatively swift and
painless. The wealth of information held on them means they can be
quickly identified and processed. But citizens of nations not signed up
to the BorderGuard scheme face hostile and lengthy investigations while
crossing frontiers.
Racial profiling is now the norm. Asian features inevitably mean being
pulled to one side - whether or not you carry a biometric passport or
ID card.
Brandscapes Retail chains and mega-malls now use huge shared databases
- which began with data-mining reward card information - to create a
"brandscape" for every shopper.
Smart tags buried in a shopper's clothing "talk" to scanners in shops.
The system then connects to consumer databases, revealing where the
clothing was bought and by whom and what other purchases the person has
made. The system knows who you are, where you live, what you like and
don't like. Intelligent billboards at eye level then immediately flash
up adverts dove-tailed to the consumer profile of the individual.
The wealthiest consumer-citizen can even become a "cashless shopper".
For £200, a chip can be implanted in the human body which is loaded
with a person's bank and credit details. From then on, it's their arm
that will be scanned in a shop, not their credit card. "Cashless
shoppers" also get first-class service in mega-malls, with special
lounges, spas and massage facilities reserved only for them. Urban
myths, however, are springing up that muggers are targeting these elite
consumers and cutting the chip from their arms. There are also concerns
about hackers being able to upload viruses to the chip or empty the
chipholder's account.
Tagged Kids Scandals about child abductions and murders during school
hours mean teachers prefer tagging a child to facing legal liability
for their injury in a court. Drug testing in schools has also become an
accepted part of life following pressure by the government to identify
problem children earlier and earlier in life. What children eat in
schools is also monitored by parents, as boys and girls are required to
swipe their school card every time they visit the canteen. The card
contains information on school attendance, academic achievement,
drug-test results, internet access and sporting activities. The card's
records are used to assess whether the child has passed or failed their
citizenship programme.
Shops are also monitoring children in order to tap into the lucrative
youth market."Children," the report says, "are gradually becoming
socialised into accepting body surveillance, location tracking and the
remote monitoring of their dietary intake as normal."
Elites and Proles Most cities are divided between gated private
communities, patrolled by corporate security firms (which keep
insurance costs to a minimum) and high-crime former council estates. On
most estates, private companies are tasked to deal with social evils.
Offenders have the option of having a chip voluntarily implanted in
their arm so they can be monitored at home using scanners and sensors.
Estates can be subject to "area-wide curfews", following outbursts of
antisocial behaviour, which ban anyone under 18 from entering or
leaving the estate from dusk until dawn.
Community wardens armed with Tasers enforce the law. CCTV cameras can
be viewed by residents at home on their television's security channel.
In gated communities, meanwhile, no-one can get in or out unless their
car's number plate is authorised by the automatic number plate
recognition (ANPR) devices located on gates. There are now so many ANPR
cameras across the land that it's almost impossible to drive the length
of a street without details of your car being logged by the state.
The aesthetics of surveillance Security has been "aestheticised" -
incorporated into the design of architecture and infrastructure - so
that it is almost unnoticeable now. "It is ubiquitous but it has
disappeared," the report authors say. Anti-suicide-bomber bollards
outside embassies and government buildings are secreted in the ground,
only being activated in an emergency when passers-by breach the range
of security sensors.
Anti-government protesters are monitored by small remote-control
spy-planes, which were introduced for the 2012 London Olympics but
remained a permanent fixture.
CCTV is now embedded at eye level in lamp-posts to enable the use of
facial recognition technology.
Protest and virtual surveillance Following protests, individual
demonstrators can be monitored by camera until private security
contractors for the local authority in which the demo took place get a
chance to question them. Helmet-mounted cameras scan the biometrics of
anyone being questioned. All guards and police are also now monitored
by surveillance devices in their handheld computers. Ironically, this
has triggered civil liberties concerns within the police union.
The report uses two "protesters", Ben and Aaron, as an example of how
police might treat dissenters. When they are taken into custody by
private security guards in Westminster, Ben undergoes the usual DNA
swab, which is analysed instantaneously, and hands over his ID card for
scanning. ID cards are still theoretically voluntary, but not having
one makes life almost impossible. Aaron is a refusenik and doesn't own
a card. That means he can't apply for a government job or claim
benefits or student loans. He can't travel by plane or even train. To
make matters worse, Aaron is a young black man - meaning he is deemed a
"high category suspect" and is routinely stopped and brought in to the
nearest police station for questioning.
Once Ben is released, police monitoring systems piggy-back on his
hand-held device to track him as he travels across the city. He's also
been put on a communications watchlist which means all his internet and
e-mail traffic is saved by his ISP and passed to police. As most phone
calls are online now, police also get access to these communications as
well.
Call centre drones Call centres monitor everything that staff do and
surveillance information is used to recruit staff. Potential employees
are subjected to biometric and psychometric testing, as well as
lifestyle surveys. "Their lives outside work," the authors say, "and
their background, are the subject of scrutiny. It is felt to be
increasingly important that the lifestyle profile of the employee match
those of the customers to ensure better customer service." Recruitment
consultants now frequently discard any CV which does not contain
volunteered health information.
Once hired, staff are subjected to sporadic biometric testing which
point to potential health and psychological problems. Thanks to
iris-scanning at a gym connected to the company, employees can be
pulled up at annual assessments for not maintaining their health.
Periodic psychometric testing also reveals if staff attitudes have
changed and become incompatible with company values.
Big Brother is looking after you Homes in the ever-growing number of
retirement villages are fitted with the "telecare" system, with motion
detectors in every room, baths with inbuilt heart monitors, toilets
which measure blood sugar levels and all rooms fitted with devices to
detect fire, flood and gas leaks. Panic buttons are also installed in
every room. Fridges have RFID scanners which tell the neighbourhood
grocery store that pensioners are running short on provisions. The
goods are then delivered direct to the doorstep.
Huge databases in hospitals are able to compare tests on patients
throughout the country. This allows doctors to red-flag risk factors
earlier than ever before, meaning that a patient's statistical risk of
suffering, for example, a heart attack, are predicted with much greater
accuracy. The NHS will be locked in a battle with insurance companies
who want access to health information for commercial purposes. The
temptation for the NHS is the large amounts of money on offer. The
authors point out that Iceland sold its national DNA database to
private companies for research and profit in 2004.
The data shadow Those rich enough can sign up to "personal information
management services" (Pims) which monitor all the information that
exists about an individual - a person's so-called "data shadow". The
Pims system corrects incorrect information held by government or
private companies.
Those who can't afford Pims have to live with the impact that incorrect
data can have on their lives, such as faulty credit ratings. "Some are
condemned to a purgatory of surveillance and an inability to access
information," the report authors say.
But for other people total surveillance has become an accepted way of
life. Some voluntarily carry out surveillance on their whole lives -
so-called "life-logging" where an individual uploads online details in
realtime about everything they do.
Original
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UK 2017: under surveillance
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