I don't consider taping you as you drive around an infrigment of privacy. After all, it's in an open, public area. The government (or any individual) can just as easily put a private eye after you who wil lrecord you every move..and that isn't ilegal. The difererence is the method and limitation - those cammeras can only tape you on the street. P.I:'s can follow you practicly everywhere.
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So you would be perfectly happy to have every person observed in every movement they make across a public space, whether by technological or individual means? You would be content to be followed, monitored and your movements be stored for possible use against you? I mean, we are talking the tip of the iceberg here. Once we have a legal framework that permits this monitoring of travel, then it's inevitable that the erosion of privacy will extend to CCTV-based biometric tracking across public areas, combined with ID card tracking (specifically, tracking the 'accesses' made to digitally check the card and the location from where they occur), and those systems will be combined to erode any sense of freedom of privacy in public (and perhaps beyond).
Furthermore, it would appear that you would be happy with any form of invasive monitoring so long as it was seen as 'public'. Presumably you have no object to the men in dark overcoats with guns, si so long as you are seen to be loyal enough to be left alone. Very Citizen Smith.
And failsafes? Police has internal control, so set up an internal control for CCTV. Problem solved. This system is no more corruptable or abusable than the police.
It's an automated, computer based system; the technological basics of it mean that it becomes much easier to subvert the system. Additionally, the very concept of the system itself is such that the only controls that could prevent the risk it poses, would be ones that removed the system itself; this system is
designed to be intrusive and invasive (as a tracking system), and designed to be used by state entities with a capacity for misuse. As I said twice before, the simple fact that the police - and army - is comprised of individuals (and a large number of them), brings in it's own oversight of simple, human conscience.
But tell me, how would you set up oversight for an automated system such as this? One with the expressed design to store where everyone has driven over the last 2+ years?
and someone mentioned it was an infringment of our freedom of travel??? I don't see how as no one is stopping you.
Because your movements can be used against you (especially in the case where the system is 'established', and hence can be believed even if altered to suit the prosecution). If your every word was taped for potential use in 2+ years (in a court case, at the very least), then that would impinge your ability to speak freely.
Moreso, you can be punished (i.e. based on these movements) without any form or ability to offer recourse. Because virtually no-one will keep a record of every journey they've made over the last 2 years - let alone proof - and yet the states digitised (i.e. numbers, not - for example - visual photographic evidence) evidence will be seen as incontestible.
B.t.w. - I really think people are shouting the word "freedoms" and "rights" waay too much. I gues you can call me conservative, but that's only becosue I've seen what too much liberalism can do...
Do you know what 'liberal' means, pray tell? It means (for
example) "tolerant of change; not bound by authoritarianism, orthodoxy, or tradition". Do the same search for conservatism.
Neither claim to stand for the erosion of individual human rights or freedoms in the name of greater state security. I believe the general term for that is something like 'totalitarian' or 'authoritarian'.
And there was me thinking the US bastardization of those terms hadn't reached Europe yet. Sigh.