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Home Blog Politics British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith loses the Internet plot

British Home Secretary Jacqui Smith loses the Internet plot

Jacqui Smith, the British Home Secretary, appears to misunderstand the Internet at every turn. It seems she now wants to monitor everything - yes everything - you do online. Whether it's a simple email message, a search on Google, a Tweet in Twitter or a posting on a social networking site - Jacqui wants to know about it.

jacquismith
Home Secretary Jacqui Smith wants to know everything you do online
Apparently it's because we are now communicating more online so the security services need to know about it so they can prevent terrorism. When will the Home Office take some basic lessons in using the Internet? Even if they want to monitor everything, anonymising software and encryption together make it virtually impossible for the security services to find out anything if someone is determined to hide it.

Most of us couldn't care less whether Jacqui Smith knows what web sites we visit, but the people she is trying to catch do care - and they will use every available tool to prevent her from finding out. The result will be millions of pounds of taxpayer's money being spent on a fool's errand. Worthless information will be obtained, bringing the security services no nearer to defeating terrorism than they are at the moment.

In fact, one of the principal reasons for the existence of terrorism is the fact that people feel controlled by the state they live in or they feel that another state is trying to control their way of life. In other words, all that Jacqui Smith is doing is adding fuel to the fire by her latest suggestion. Not only is the Home Office showing its ignorance of the way the internet works, it is demonstrating a lack of understanding of the psychology of terrorists.

Quite apart from the ever-increasing state control over our lives the British Government appears to want to take, it is yet another example of how our leaders fail to understand the basics of the technology that runs the country. At every twist and turn they show a failure to even attempt to understand the internet. In the end, that will be their downfall.

Why? You only have to look at the BAFTAs, which were aired last night on UK television. These are the annual television awards and the "viewer's choice" award went to a programme about teenagers, called Skins. This gets a viewing figure of around 1.5m. Yet it was up against X-Factor and Coronation Street, both of which have audiences of around 12m. So how come the less popular programme received the most votes from the public? Easy. The public had to vote via the web or via text message. The teenage viewers could easily vote for their favourite, whereas the grannies who love Corrie or X-Factor would have had a much tougher time.

Come the next election in a year's time, the youth vote will evaporate from the Labour Party as the younger generations will be able to mount online campaigns and motivate people much more easily to vote against them. Combine that with an apathetic older generation who simply feel politics has let them down and you have a looming disaster for Gordon Brown. Many people will tell you that the state of the economy determines an election result. This time around, it will be the internet. And since the Government has shown again today with its call for monitoring all online activities that it consistently fails to understand this technology, they are doomed.

And Jacqui Smith thought her only problem was her husband watching porn movies.


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3 Comments

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  1. If they can monitor my emails and social network chats, shouldn't they also monitor my chats in cafes and office meetings too? Why pick on one form of chat? As you always say, the answer is because of the misunderstood Big Evil Interweb Supernet. It's good to read in the above that in an age where we really are living in a type of '1984' Big Brother surveillance society - the conduit for that surveillance, the internet, can also work for us, enhancing democracy way on a scale that we have never yet seen but will at the next election. Looking forward to it.
  2. Graham Types like Smith know exactly what they are doing. "Nationalistic Idolatry, Non-Stop Distraction and Organised Lying" - Aldous Huxley
  3. UPDATE - so she's backed off! This though at Iain Dale's blog: Iain Dale's Diary "Could someone please explain to me why, in a non Police state, I shouldn't be able to look at perfectly legal websites without the authorities knowing I have done so? If I, like the Home Secretary's husband, want to look at Raw Meat 3, why should she be able to know that I have done so? It's not as if I am married to her, or anything, after all. But even worse than that. She's going to have access to my emails and texts too. This is 1984 writ large. If you've done nothing wrong, you have nothing to fear we are told. If I have done nothing wrong, I shouldn't, in a liberty loving democracy, have to prove my innocence. Jacqui Smith has abandoned her idea for a giant database, but any retention of my personal data by the state beyond the bare minimum is totally unacceptable. How can it possibly be justified for the state to monitor the entire population? That's what the Stasi did. We British must fight for our right to privacy and the presumption of innocence"."

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