Authored by Brian Micklethwait:
Minnesota demands to know who has what PC?
Guilty until proved innocent
The cameras are getting smaller
Speed camera island
False records
The Register
on false certainty
An expensive piece of research
Miaow
ID cards will only ruin the lives of the law abiding
Overprotected data?
Excessive regulation leads to arbitrary government
Free speech equals exclusion
Privacy law promised in Ontario
Economist
throws doubt on the current value of biometrics
First they came for the spammers …
"Thank you for not speeding!"
Curbing freelance surveillance in Chicago
Turning tradesmen into government agents
Recognising faces better with CCTV
A law against spam that will legalise it
White Rose Relevance on Transport Blog
Voting machines with no paper trails
Not so funny junk mail
Is it surveillance? - Is it art?
The Queen's Speech on ID cards
Aussie rules interrogation – rules change from 24 hrs to 48 hrs and you mustn't tell anyone about it
Choosing not to have your number listed
A global alliance against RFID
Speed camera terrorists
"Like your knickers - too bad you're so poor ..."
ID cards on TalkSport Radio tonight
This EU road pricing system is more intrusive than what they want to forbid, right?
FBI under-12s
Chicago Civil Liberties conference - Nov 5th
Diebold versus the Internet in the
New York Times
Lie detection software for phone conversations
Eyes under water
Once they've got our number ...
Anti-surveillance
Press release from Privacy International says Government is breaching Human Rights law
"In principle …"
"… they'll already know who you are"
Big Mother
Sarkosy guarantees authenticity
Ron Paul on medical privacy
Mr Blog asks the right question but gets the wrong answer
Thumb-print scanning and conversation monitoring
Everybody knows but you still aren't allowed to tell anyone
No privacy for accused celebs
Electronic privacy in the USA
Carry your voluntary ID card or else …
Good attitudes at the ASI blog
More on UbiComp
Privacy that isn't
Ubiquitous computing
Sean Gabb on his ID card radio opponents: "Drunk on technology that they didn't understand"
Sean Gabb on Radio 5 Live tonight about ID cards
Mr Archer - retrospectively
Depth of information
Not such a little list
Betting on the law
Patriot Act II
Carry on snooping
Caring Big Brother
Some old surveillance news
Car NZurveillance
ID numbers and Hidden Europe
ID card costs and benefits
RFID is just too useful
Blair faces ID card revolt
Mr Tung defuses the issue in Hong Kong
International privacy survey
Italy against the spamsters
Databases – it ain't necessarily so
Compulsory ID cards on the way in Holland
The double menace of viruspam
Not so anonymised after all
A country becoming less free
From lawyers to informants
ID card pilot scheme
Surveillance marketing
Beyond Reasonable Doubt
Homeland Security defended
More DNA database debate
"… potential troublemakers …"
"… the largest conglomeration of government-private contractor interests since the creation of the Pentagon …"
Mapping the traces you leave in Amsterdam
Televised digging with a smoking gun
Be careful what you say you want the government to forbid …
ID cards must be OK if they're doing them
How Microsoft Word is a window into your innermost thoughts
Posthumous medical privacy
Government and commercial records
Intelligent mail
A dot gov dot uk that gives you relationship advice – and an ID card!
The civil liberties implications of having too many laws
Who is paying attention to all the cameras?
Public Prosecutions protestations
Spit database
Chipping away at the Constitution and civil liberties
Steven Chapman on this and that
The USA/Canada drugs story – the White Rose angle
"The selection process was completely transparent and accountable"
"Unconstitutionally vague"
A centrally-held through life record
Little Brother is now watching Big Brother
Accusation as punishment
Getting them used to it early
"… when policemen's eyes are full of pound signs …"
John Mortimer on the law and the politicians
Homeland Security is looking for other things to do
Taps, bugs and covert cameras
"Massively illegal"
ID card fig leaf
"We have an obligation …"
The internet in China – and government monitoring of it
James Woolsey on security versus liberty
ID to buy a cellphone in Newfoundland
DNA crime database for sale
In defence of little Miss Trouble-Maker
Temporary State Commission
Putting it back together
The cheap end of the surveillance market
ID card comments on Samizdata
"Law abiding citizens have nothing to fear …"
Portable phone with a difference
II6 versus PP4
No escape with the new digital version …
The Hong Kong march seems to have worked
Is this for real?
The democratisation of surveillance
Amendments
MagnaCartaPlus
The cameras really are everywhere
First they tracked the motorists of Baghdad …
Promises promises
Total Surveillance versus Anonymous Charging:
the road pricing dilemma
Reflections on "Big Brother":
the total surveillance society and the prescience of popular culture
Stand.org.uk delivers on ID cards
Organ donation and the reversal of non-consent