Helen A.S. Popkin
Web founder: Government snooping is a 'destruction of human rights'
This week, as U.S. activists urge Internet users to protest CISPA, the cybersecurity bill moving through Congress, an Internet founder spoke out against a similar bill under consideration in the UK.
In an
interview with the Guardian,
Sir Tim Berners-Leesaid the British government's plan to monitor the Internet activity of everyone in the country would be a "destruction of human rights." Berners-Lee, who engineered link communication on the World Wide Web (aka HTML), also advises the UK government on making public data accessible. While he supports making government records available, he says fears over the government collecting personal data "keep me up most at night."
Announced on April 1, the UK government's plans for Internet surveillance include offering "law enforcement agencies unprecedented access to private communications,"
Engadget noted earlier this month.
"British cellphone operators and ISPs will be required to harvest packet data -- containing the parties to all calls, emails and social media communication, as well as the time and duration of each message." Specifics of the plan are scheduled to be announced on May 9.
This is too much information, and too much power, Berners-Lee told the Guardian. "The amount of control you have over somebody if you can monitor Internet activity is amazing," he said.
"The idea that we should routinely record information about people is obviously very dangerous. It means that there will be information around which could be stolen, which can be acquired through corrupt officials or corrupt operators, and [could be] used, for example, to blackmail people in the government or people in the military. We open ourselves out, if we store this information, to it being abused."
Berners-Lee's interview is part of the Guardian's seven-day special series,
Battle for the Internet. The series runs concurrently with a campaign by U.S. advocacies, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Electronic Frontier Foundation, which urges Internet users to
contact Congress to speak out against this Cybersecurity Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA).
Similar to the UK government's Internet surveillance plans, CISPA would allow ISPs, social networks such as Facebook, cellphone providers to share user information with the U.S. government and associated private parties without a search warrant or any other judicial oversite. What's more, neither the government nor the service providers are required to tell targeted individuals that their personal info is being investigated or why.
Berners-Lee also spoke out against CISPA, saying it's "threatening the rights of people in America, and effectively rights everywhere, because what happens in America tends to affect people all over the world," he told the Guardian. "Even though the SOPA and PIPA acts were stopped by huge public outcry, it's staggering how quickly the U.S. government has come back with a new, different, threat to the rights of its citizens."
-- via The Guardian