David Cameron Says Snooper's Charter Is Necessary Because Fictional Crime Dramas ...
#1
Guardian Releases Video From That Time Its Editors Were Forced To Destroy A Laptop That Had Snowden Documents

You may recall how, last summer, there was a ridiculous situation in which David Cameron ordered a government official to go down to the Guardian's offices in London and force them to physically destroy a computer that had stored some encrypted documents from the batch of documents that Ed Snowden had given to reporters. The whole thing was ridiculous on multiple levels, as the Guardian's editor Alan Rusbridger clearly told the government officials that there were other copies outside of the UK, and that the Guardian would continue reporting on those documents from its offices in NY. Apparently unaware of how stupid they looked, the government officials continued the charade, and the Guardian physically destroyed the drives and memory cards.

The Guardian has now released a short video that intersperses some commentary and news clips about the event with some actual footage of Guardian employees taking power tools to the components in question. As Rusbridger noted at the time, this was a particularly "pointless piece of symbolism that understood nothing about the digital age." And, really, that line could apply to an awful lot about the NSA/GCHQ affair lately. Yes, they understand a lot about how to spy on everyone via digital tools, but they've shown little to no recognition of the problems this creates for the economy, for technology, for innovation, for privacy, for security and for public sentiment.



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#2
David Cameron Says Snooper's Charter Is Necessary Because Fictional Crime Dramas He Watches Prove It

You may recall the stories from the past couple years about the so-called "snooper's charter" in the UK -- a system to further legalize the government's ability to spy on pretty much all communications. It was setting up basically a total surveillance system, even beyond what we've since learned is already being done today. Thankfully, that plan was killed off by Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.

However, Prime Minister David Cameron is back to pushing for the snooper's charter -- and his reasoning is as stupid as it is unbelievable. Apparently, he thinks it's necessary because the fictional crime dramas he watches on TV show why it's necessary. I am not joking, even though I wish I was:
Quote: In the most serious crimes [such as] child abduction communications data... is absolutely vital. I love watching, as I probably should stop telling people, crime dramas on the television. There's hardly a crime drama where a crime is solved without using the data of a mobile communications device.

What we have to explain to people is that... if we don't modernise the practice and the law, over time we will have the communications data to solve these horrible crimes on a shrinking proportion of the total use of devices and that is a real problem for keeping people safe.

Yes, he just said that. Because fictional characters on crime drama TV shows make use of data, that's somehow proof that it's necessary. Perhaps someone can send Cameron a copy of Enemy of the State or any other fictional work showing how the government can abuse such information. Or, better yet, let's have our side stick with reality, and we can just point to real historical events of governments abusing such information.



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#3
ok this guy went from being smart to retarded in less time than it takes light to reach me from a light bulb... seriously either he got a concision or he was hit with a stupid stick one too many times...
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#4
(Jan 31, 2014, 21:50 pm)ddoking007 Wrote: ok this guy went from being smart..................

60+ million would disagree with that statement. Just as Bush had his bum buddy. Obama now has his Wink
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#5
You might mock, but since Cameron took office the average time to solve murders has fallen to under 42 minutes.
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#6
(Jan 31, 2014, 22:57 pm)NIK Wrote: You might mock, but since Cameron took office the average time to solve murders has fallen to under 42 minutes.

Yep. A worrying statistic Confused
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#7
I bet in the U.K., under Cameron's new Internet Puritanism laws, my username is effectively illegal. Tongue

I wonder if he's seen (or read) this "fictional drama"?

[Image: Nineteen_Eighty_Four.jpg]
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#8
Couldn't they simply remove the hard drive from the computer, destroy that, then put a new hard drive in the computer? That way, they have a new computer.
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