Details of every phone call and text message, email traffic and websites visited online are to be stored in a series of vast databases under new Government anti-terror plans.
Landline and mobile phone companies and broadband providers will be ordered to store the data for a year and make it available to the security services under the scheme.
The databases would not record the contents of calls, texts or emails but the numbers or email addresses of who they are sent and received by.
For the first time, the security services will have widespread access to information about who has been communicating with each other on social networking sites such as Facebook.
Direct messages between subscribers to websites such as Twitter would also be stored, as well as communications between players in online video games.
The Home Office is understood to have begun negotiations with internet companies in the last two months over the plan, which could be officially announced as early as May.
Gus Hosein, of Privacy International, said: ââ¬ÅThis will be ripe for hacking. Every hacker, every malicious threat, every foreign government is going to want access to this.
ââ¬ÅAnd if communications providers have a government mandate to start collecting this information they will be incredibly tempted to start monitoring this data themselves so they can compete with Google and Facebook.ââ¬Â
He added: ââ¬ÅThe internet companies will be told to store who you are friends with and interact with. While this may appear innocuous it requires the active interception of every single communication you make, and this has never been done in a democratic society.ââ¬Â
Full article: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/technolo...ail-records-to-be-stored-in-new-spy-plan.html
Watch out! Big Brother is watching you!