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UK government to spy on citizens’ phone and email use

The government of the United Kingdom leaked its plans yesterday to launch a program which will monitor every British citizen’s emails, internet browsing records, and telephone conversations. While a specific plan has not been reached, UK ministers agreed on spending up to £12 billion (USD$21.2 billion) on the new spying system. More than £1 billion (USD$1.76 billion) has already been spent.

They believe the program, which will create a massive database for storing the information, is necessary to fight threats to national security. One of the reasons cited for creating the database is to keep links between terrorists intact before they are wiped from systems, which often hold information only temporarily.

Under the UK’s current law a warrant is required to intercept communications, but that will change with the implementation of the new database.

Critics like Michael Parker, an anti-ID card activist, have called the proposal ’sinister’, and accused the UK government of ’stalking’ British citizens. “If an individual carried out this sort of snooping,” Parker said, “it would be a crime”.

But other critics like Dominic Grieve, Shadow Home Secretary, have a different concern. The government has a record of leaking sensitive information, making such a database insecure—which could be dangerous in the wrong hands. “Seeing how significant an increase in power this would be, we need to have a national debate and the Government would have to justify its need,” he finished.

A public debate is being considered after the request of the UK’s Information Commissioner, who has warned that the program would be unacceptable to most of the UK’s citizens.

Story Source: Wikinews
October 7th, 2008
English Vocabulary Notes
leaked = made public
spying = secretly find out information
links = connections
intact = whole
wiped = cleaned
warrant = special permission
stalking = following people
snooping = trying to find out information about someone (considered very impolite in British culture)

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