英国全面进入“一号空降场”状态
Britain Goes Full 'Airstrip One'

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/britain-goes-full-airstrip-one

在为《PJ Media》撰写的一篇评论中,斯蒂芬·格林(Stephen Green)指出,英国正日益变得像乔治·奥威尔在《1984》中所描述的监控国家。英国议会目前提出的新立法草案意在强制苹果和谷歌等科技巨头在所有智能手机上实施“客户端扫描”,以检测裸露图像。尽管支持者将其包装为一项保障儿童安全的措施,但批评人士警告称,这必然意味着政府将强制对所有私人信息、照片和视频通话进行实时监控。 其核心担忧在于,这种基础设施一旦建立,极易陷入“任务蔓延”的陷阱。通过强迫公司安装无法移除的扫描软件,政府创造了一种通用的监控工具;最终,这些工具可能会被转而用于针对异见人士、查禁文学作品或当局认为不妥的任何内容。格林观察到一种讽刺:奥威尔曾担忧通过“电幕”进行的强制监控,而现代社会却自愿拥抱了这些设备,随身携带并向其托付了我们最隐秘的私事。归根结底,作者认为,在公共安全的幌子下,不能信任英国政府拥有检查每一次数字互动的权力。

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原文

Authored by Stephen Green via PJMedia.com,

In George Orwell's 1984, Great Britain was just a province of Oceania named "Airstrip One" as a none-too-subtle nod to the U.K.'s role as host to the heavy bombers of U.S. Eighth Air Force during World War II.

Four decades past the real 1984, and there's still no Oceania. But Britain looks more and more like Airstrip One as Parliament considers a bill opening up everyone's smartphone to government supervision — and jail time for tech execs who don't submit.

You had to figure this was probably coming, right?

Right.

Reclaim the Net reports that "Ministers are reportedly drafting a law that would force Apple, Google, and the rest to make it impossible for a child to send, receive, view, or share a single nude image, with the executives who refuse facing up to five years in prison."

That might sound all well and good, but as usual, For the Children™ is little more than the government's justification for total surveillance.

"You cannot block every naked picture someone might stumble across without inspecting every picture, every message, every video call, every streamed film, on every device, all the time," Reclaim noted, with nudity serving as "the excuse and the unbroken view into your phone is the actual prize."

The industry term is "client-side scanning," which sounds much nicer than "a government mandated app that looks at everything on your phone all the time."

And even that sounds better than "Big Brother is Watching You," which is exactly what it is.

As already required by Britain's Online Safety Act, Apple and Google forcibly install age verification on every iPhone and Android device in the UK via app store updates.

No, it can't be uninstalled.

As I reported in January, what this means in practice is that London's Office of Communications ("Ofcom" in Newspeak) mandates on-device software able to read everybody's "private" messages in real-time and scan their images, too, before any personal encryption tools come into play. 

London pinky-swears that it'll only look for CSAM and terrorism-related materials, but as the Telegram's Zia Yusuf put it back then, "the slippery slope is obvious" and "mission creep is inevitable." The country looking to ban traditional chef's knives (really!) in the name of safety simply cannot be trusted with this much digital power.

Nobody can, really. 

The way things work now, if you don't pass the mandatory age check, the iPhone software bars adult websites on every installable browser, and the Communication Safety feature scans every AirDrop, FaceTime, Messages, and photo for nudity, blurring whatever it catches. And the Android filter works in a similar way.

All For the Children™, naturally. 

But as Reclaim also pointed out, client-side scanning is "a general-purpose content scanner pointed at one target this year and swivelable toward any other the next, a flyer for the wrong march, a banned book, a face the Home Office has taken against."

Now that the software is installed, Parliament can authorize the Home Office to ignore the age check and look for whatever it wants to on literally everyone's device. That's exactly what Parliament wants to do next.

Orwell envisioned ever-present two-way telescreens mounted on almost every wall that could only try to monitor everyone all the time. He never envisioned a telescreen that people would pay good money for, carry around 24/7, and trust with their every notion and secret.

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