|
Britons
'could be microchipped like dogs in a decade'
London Evening
Standard | Oct. 30, 2006
Human beings may be forced to be 'microchipped' like pet dogs, a
shocking official report into the rise of the Big Brother state has
warned.
The microchips
- which are implanted under the skin - allow the wearer's movements
to be tracked and store personal information about them.
They could be
used by companies who want to keep tabs on an employee's movements
or by Governments who want a foolproof way of identifying their
citizens - and storing information about them.
The prospect
of 'chip-citizens' - with its terrifying echoes of George Orwell's
'Big Brother' police state in the book 1984 - was raised in an
official report for Britain's Information Commissioner Richard
Thomas into the spread of surveillance technology.
The report,
drawn up by a team of respected academics, claims that Britain is a
world-leader in the use of surveillance technology and its citizens
the most spied-upon in the free world.
It paints a
frightening picture of what Britain might be like in ten years time
unless steps are taken to regulate the use of CCTV and other spy
technologies.
The reports
editors Dr David Murakami Wood, managing editor of the journal
Surveillance and Society and Dr Kirstie Ball, an Open University
lecturer in Organisation Studies, claim that by 2016 our almost
every movement, purchase and communication could be monitored by a
complex network of interlinking surveillance technologies.
The most
contentious prediction is the spread in the use of Radio Frequency
Identification (RFID) technology.
The RFID chips
- which can be detected and read by radio waves - are already used
in new UK passports and are also used the Oyster card system to
access the London Transport network.
For the past
six years European countries have been using RFID chips to identify
pet animals.
Already used
in America
However, its
use in humans has already been trialled in America, where the chips
were implanted in 70 mentally-ill elderly people in order to track
their movements.
And earlier
this year a security company in Ohio chipped two of its employees to
allow them to enter a secure area. The glass-encased chips were
planted in the recipients' upper right arms and 'read' by a device
similar to a credit card reader.
In their
Report on the Surveillance Society, the authors now warn: "The call
for everyone to be implanted is now being seriously debated."
The authors
also highlight the Government's huge enthusiasm for CCTV, pointing
out that during the 1990s the Home Office spent 78 per cent of its
crime prevention budget - a total of £500 million - on installing
the cameras.
There are now
4.2 million CCTV cameras in Britain and the average Briton is caught
on camera an astonishing 300 times every day.
This huge
enthusiasm comes despite official Home Office statistics showing
that CCTV cameras have 'little effect on crime levels'.
They write:
"The surveillance society has come about us without us realising",
adding: "Some of it is essential for providing the services we need:
health, benefits, education. Some of it is more questionable. Some
of it may be unjustified, intrusive and oppressive."
Yesterday
Information Commissioner Richard Thomas, whose office is
investigating the Post Office, HSBC, NatWest and the Royal Bank of
Scotland over claims they dumped sensitive customer details in the
street, said: "Many of these schemes are public sector driven, and
the individual has no choice over whether or not to take part."
"People are
being scrutinised and having their lives tracked, and are not even
aware of it."
He has also
voiced his concern about the consequences of companies, or
Government agencies, building up too much personal information about
someone.
He said: "It
can stigmatise people. I have worries about technology being used to
identify classes of people who present some kind of risk to society.
And I think there are real anxieties about that."
Yesterday a
spokesman for civil liberties campaigners Liberty said: "We have got
nothing about these surveillance technologies in themselves, but it
is their potential uses about which there are legitimate fears.
Unless their uses are regulated properly, people really could find
themselves living in a surveillance society.
"There is a
rather scary underlying feeling that people may worry that these
microchips are less about being a human being than becoming a
barcoded product."
|