"A private company could be asked to run a huge database containing details of everybody's telephone calls, emails and internet use, it has been reported."
"The database, which critics claim would cost up to £12bn, is not intended to record the content of communications, but only the details of internet sites visited and what emails and telephone calls have been made, to whom and at what times. "
As reported today on BBC News
This is getting perilously close to George Orwell's 1984 vision of society.
Liberal Democrat Lords challenge telephone and internet record database proposals
Mon, 17 Nov 2008 Speaking in the House of Lords, Baroness Miller of Chilthorne Domer described the measures as a "huge step" towards "a person with a right to privacy...being treated as a suspect." She questioned how effective the costly proposals would prove, given the vast amounts of correspondence the database would contain.
"With 3 billion e-mails - that is, 35,000 every second - 18 million internet connections and 57 billion text messages a year, does he think that this is really likely to prove the most effective way of fighting terrorism, given that the estimated cost will be up to £12 billion?"
Lord Avebury supported Baroness Miller's comments, highlighting the distinction "between looking at individual accesses with a view to the detection of particular crimes...and the collection of a record of every telephone conversation, every internet access and every text message made by you and me across the board, to be kept in a government-held database for ever." He called on the Government to publish a PowerPoint presentation given to internet service providers explaining the proposal in detail.
Lord Thomas of Gresford suggested, "that the information should be available only for the solution of serious crime" to safeguard against government abuse.
Read the House of Lords debate here
List of Labour's failures to date in IT related projects:
£13 billion on an NHS record system that is a complete failure
£200 million wasted over the past five years on IT projects that were never completed