consultations, elections, feedback, accountability and redress, openess and freedom of information
11 Apr 2008
Return-to-work freelancer gets unceremoniously flamed in The Reg
El Reg invited me to do my first piece of frelance journalism for several years - an article about Microsoft’s acquisition of Stefan Brands’ U-Prove work. I was never a brilliant journalist and I’m a bit rusty; the piece was longwinded and late. The Reg’s readers give pretty short shrift to most things anyway.
In the dozen or so comments, readers are offended by the suggestion that Jacqui Smith the Home Secretary is a pretty smart woman. Anonymous Coward retorts, for example
Her utterances in post have been utterly without personality; and her entire career would fit better with the theory she’s an energetic loyalist slogger not an imaginitive thinker.
Eponymous Cowherd takes a similar view.
The fact is that few politicians would score that well in a test on tech issues which the average Reg reader would sail through. But they’re called on to apply themselves more or less to every issue Parliament debates or that their constituents come up with. They’re ultimate generalists. I can’t produce Jacqui Smith’s examn results to defend my remarks but I stand by the sentiment that you dont get to be Britain’s first woman Home Secretary without being a smart woman. Furthermore, we won’t get the chance to put to her how important these developments in Internet security and privacy are if we approach her in a dismissive and insulting way. We’ve got to the stage where the intelligent generalist needs to understand the importance of privacy-enhancing technologies in general and minimum disclosure tokens in particular. We need to think carefully how to engage in that conversation.
Meanwhile jubtastic1 and others haul me up, with some justification, for not explaining Dr Brands limited disclosure credentials very clearly. On rereading the article I think that’s a fair cop. Sorry! It’s not insulting to anyone to say 99.9% of us will never understand the maths of Stefan’s solutions - I have a maths A-level and I couldn’t even name the symbols in many of his equations let alone prove whether they add up correctly to something to which I can entrust my personal details online.
Stefan did patiently explain U-Prove to me in a new and different way with analogies based on soap bars with shapes stamped underneath. The problem, as I said, is that he’s solved an emerging problem which, though serious and real, has no simple analogy in the tangible world. Nor does his solution have an analogy in the visible and tangible world; a number of its benefits are counterintuitive.
I guess his video animations are a helpful explanation to which I should have linked earlier. But I have to make it clear again to those who want to _really_ understand his work I’m not the man who can help. I dont _really_ understand it. Anyway, it’s not me that matters, and the world’s cyptographers are not the only ones who matter. Jacqui Smith matters. Ollie Letwin understood it when a FIPR colleague and I explained it to him a few years ago (and a half-hour meeting lasted 90 minutes). The challenge is: how can we ensure the importance of this is put to the Home Secretary? How can it be done in a way that is persuasive?
Oh wow. Prompted by those headline-seekers at #10 a Commons Committee has decided to open up the House to the idea of e-petitions, arguing (with some logic) that it is to Parliament we should be petitioning - not to the PM - and that our MPs ought to be involved in the process (see earlier post here).
The Procedures Committee has just released its report with the pros and cons, and recommending their preferred option here including a way we can petition to www.parliament.uk and have three Westminster Hall debates a year (ie not full-on debates in the Chamber, but well worth having and often of pretty good quality I gather).Procedures Committee chair Greg Knight MP says in the press release (full text below)
“Historically and constitutionally the House of Commons is the place to which petitions should properly be presented. It is time for the House to reclaim that role in the internet age.”
They point out that the e-petitions service has seen #10 get petitions at levels the House has not seen since the end of the C19th (which would have been the slave trade abolitionists I guess)
So - what should we petition on for those first three Westminster Hall debates? I reckon
1. We ask Parliament to create and endorse a long-term plan to reduce our economic dependence on the arms trade
2. ....and for evidence-based raionalisation of our drug laws with the aim of reducing the harm done to society and
3. ...and for some sort of legal ownership of our own data including biometrics with criminal sanctions for abuse
Procedure Committee
Select Committee Press Release
House of Commons London SW1P 3JA
Media enquiries Liz Parratt 07917 488978
Embargoed: not to be published in any form before 00.01 am Sunday 6 April 2008
‘> Commons should have e-petitions> ‘> say MPs
The House of Commons Procedure Committee today publishes a report on e-Petitions, proposing a scheme which would:
* Enable e-petitions to be submitted via www.parliament.uk;
* Retain the direct involvement of constituency MPs in the petitions procedure;
* Lead to three Westminster Hall debates based on petitions every year.
A four month inquiry by the Committee concluded that e-petitioning offers a simple, effective and transparent way for the public to tell MPs about what matters to them and to indicate levels of support for their concerns. The Committee> ‘> s proposed scheme would provide petitioners with advice and support and with a route to follow up the petition after its presentation > -> as well as improving engagement and transparency.
Experience elsewhere, particularly on the 10 Downing Street website, has demonstrated high levels of public interest and engagement. In its first year of operation the Downing Street site received some 29,000 petitions and 5.5 million signatures. The House of Commons has not experienced a comparable volume since the late nineteenth century.
Chairman Greg Knight MP said:
“Historically and constitutionally the House of Commons is the place to which petitions should properly be presented. It is time for the House to reclaim that role in the internet age.”
The Committee also considered the possible risks, including trivial or > ‘> mischievous> ‘> petitions; costs; implications for MPs> ‘> workload, and the consequences of failure.
The report concludes that if e-petitioning is to attract the widest possible range of users, it will need to be able to adapt and respond to their expectations, and to cope with potentially high and unpredictable levels of demand: the introduction of e-petitioning in itself will raise expectations and the House will need to show that it is willing and able to respond.
Greg Knight continued:
“> We are not aware of any other existing scheme of comparable scale and ambition. It has the potential to open up the House> ‘> s proceedings in new and to some extent unpredictable ways.> “>
The Committee> ‘> s recommendations are likely to be debated by the House of Commons this summer.
/ends
NOTE FOR EDITORS:
The Procedure Committee considers the practice and procedure of the House in the conduct of public business. The Committee was nominated on 13 July 2005. Mr Greg Knight became Chairman of the Committee on 9 November 2005.
1 Government view: in The Governance of Britain, the Government stated that it believed that the House of Commons should have > ‘> up to date procedures for considering petitions> ‘> and that > ‘> people should be able to petition the House of Commons with as much ease as they should be able to petition the Prime Minister.> ‘> (Cm 7170, para 151 and 161). In its response to the Committee> ‘> s previous report the Government repeated its support for an e-petitions system (Cm 7193, para 3).
2 History: the petitioning of the House of Commons has a long history stretching back at least to the late middle ages.
Originally petitions were overwhelmingly requests for the redress of personal grievances.
Petitions requesting changes in general legislation or public policy first came to prominence in the early years of the seventeenth century.
Radical politicians such as John Wilkes used them for purposes of national agitation in the second half of the eighteenth century and it is from that time the modern form of public petition may be said to date. >
The early years of the nineteenth century saw a dramatic increase in the numbers of petitions presented to the House of Commons. In the five years ending in 1805, 1,026 were presented > -> a figure broadly comparable with the numbers we experience today some two hundred years later. In the five years ending in 1831, however, 24,492 were presented. Many of these petitions related to the need for parliamentary reform and in particular to the passage of what has become known as the Great Reform Act of 1832.
The petitions presented in support of that Act were the first example of what became a series of major campaigns fought during the nineteenth century in which mass petitions to the House of Commons played a significant part. In 1843, 33,898 petitions were received, the largest number ever in a single session.
The history of petitions in the twentieth century was broadly one of decline. Since the 1912 > -> 13 parliamentary session (when nearly 10,000 petitions were presented against the Established Church (Wales) Bill) the number of petitions presented in a single session exceeded one thousand only once (in 1988 > -> 89, where many were in favour of legislation to protect the human embryo). Nonetheless petitions with very large numbers of signatures continued to be presented either from organisations (motoring organisations petitioned against motor taxation in 1927 and for the restoration of the basic petrol ration in 1948) or on major issues of political controversy (eg for the prohibition of atomic weapons in 1950 > -> 51).
3 Details of the Committee> ‘> s preferred option:
* E-petitions can be submitted via www.parliament.uk;
* If they comply with the House> ‘> s rules, the petitioner> ‘> s constituency MP will be asked to act as facilitator;
* The e-petition is then posted on the parliamentary website for a set period. Others may add their names to it;
* At the end of the period, it is closed. Members will be able to indicate support for it.
* It is then presented to the house, either electronically or on the floor;
* Petitioners and signatories may opt in to receive updates on the progress of the e-petition and/or up to two emails from their constituency MP;
* E-petitions will then be printed in Hansard and sent to select committees and may be considered by them;
* The Government will normally be expected to reply within two months of presentation;
* On three occasions each year, certain e-petitions will be debated by the House of Commons in Westminster Hall.
FURTHER INFORMATION:
Media Enquiries: Liz Parratt 07917 488978 parrattl@parliament.uk
Specific Committee Information: Tel 020 7219 3318, email: proccom@parliament.uk
Committee Website: http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/procedure_committee.cfm
Watch committees and parliamentary debates online: www.parliamentlive.tv
Publications / Reports / Reference Material: Copies of all select committee reports are available from the Parliamentary Bookshop (12 Bridge St, Westminster, 020 7219 3890) or the Stationery Office (0845 7023474). Committee reports, press releases, evidence transcripts, Bills; research papers, a directory of MPs, plus Hansard (from 8am daily) and much more, can be found on www.parliament.uk
FURTHER INFORMATION:
1. Committee Membership is as follows:
Rt Hon Greg Knight MP (Con, Yorkshire East) (Chairman)
Ms Celia Barlow MP (Lab, Hove)
Mr Christopher Chope (Con, Christchurch)
Ms Katy Clark MP (Lab, North Ayrshire & Arran)
Mr Roger Gale MP (Con, North Thanet)
Andrew Gwynne MP (Lab, Denton & Reddish)
John Hemming MP (LibDem, Birmingham, Yardley)
Mr Eric Illsley MP (Lab, Barnsley Central) Mrs Siân C. James MP (Lab, Swansea East)>
Rosemary McKenna CBE MP (Lab, Cumbernauld,
Kilsyth & Kirkintilloch East)
Mrs Linda Riordan MP (Lab, Halifax)
Sir Robert Smith MP (LibDem, West Aberdeenshire &
Kincardine)
Mr Rob Wilson MP (Con, Reading East)
As some people may have noticed, mySociety have recently launched another website. This one, WhatDoTheyKnow is a Freedom of Information filer, I’ll let you read the blurb on the site about how it works…
Earlier on, I had a brain-fart. It went along the lines of:
what if there were a standard/Government Best-Practice/regulation, throughout the Civil Service (and anything on the {.ac,.gov,.mod,.nhs,.police,.sch}.uk LIR, really), for common ‘service’ email addresses.
e.g., in the way that RFC-2142 mandates (well, as much as RFCs are mandatory) “postmaster” and “hostmaster” to include:
“foi” for Freedom of Information
“dpa” for data protection
“secretary.of.state”
“ministers”
“permanent.secretary”
Or suitable alternatives/equivalents for the last three.
In doing so, things for individuals would (I’d say) be so much more useful: using aliases would remove the problems of individuals’ email addresses falling out of use, when people move on/change portfolio, it would enable people to not have to worry about looking for the email address on the webpage (where they are easily traceable on the body’s website...), it means reception desks can say “ah yes, you want foi@werock.gov.uk” and not “erm, I’m not sure, let me transfer you to IT/Legal Services, they might know”.
Perhaps even extend this over to constituency.mp@parliament.uk?
So, I guess the point of this post really is for a collective opinion gathering… hopefully it’ll be something for some of us to talk about at the next Govhack Afternoon Teas too?
(ooh, is that three plugs I managed to squeeze in?)
Malaysia’s weak opposition was up against a hostile mainstream media and restrictive campaign rules, but it can chalk up much of its stunning success in Saturday’s election to the power of cyberspace.
Voters exasperated with the unvarnished support of the mainstream media for the ruling National Front furiously clicked on YouTube and posted comments with popular bloggers about tales of sex, lies and videotapes in the run-up to Saturday’s election.
Jeff Ooi, a 52-year-old former advertising copywriter who made his name writing a political blog, “Screenshots” (www.jeffooi.com) won a seat in northern Penang state for the opposition Democratic Action Party (DAP).
Elizabeth Wong, a human rights activist and political consultant who runs a blog (http://elizabethwong.wordpress.com), won a state assembly seat in the central state of Selangor.
YouTube, the phenomenally popular video Web site, did as much damage as any opposition figure could hope to inflict, after netizens uploaded embarrassing videos of their politicians in action on hot-button issues.
HMG’s war on my bald, half-blind Australian friend
There’s a nice bit of intellectual-pygmy TV with Simon and Gus from PI propping up the LSE bar talking through their political persecution over the ID project. My noble Lords, I won’t cast aspersions on the LSE (but let’s all have a go at Simon Davies anyway). It’s an interesting story, far from Ideal, and worth a bit more work including some FoI digging and the naming of some more names.
People diss Rowan Williams but he spelt out years ago why customer was such an unsatisfactory term for the active participant in “services” such as health or education.
Now he spells out, in his widely-misunderstood (has anyone READ the original text?) speech on Sharia, why the spiritual grounding of our ID System plans is as offensive as Islamic primitivism:
The danger arises not only when there is an assumption on the religious side that membership of the community (belonging to the umma or the Church or whatever) is the only significant category, so that participation in other kinds of socio-political arrangement is a kind of betrayal. It also occurs when secular government assumes a monopoly in terms of defining public and political identity. There is a position – not at all unfamiliar in contemporary discussion – which says that to be a citizen is essentially and simply to be under the rule of the uniform law of a sovereign state, in such a way that any other relations, commitments or protocols of behaviour belong exclusively to the realm of the private and of individual choice. As I have maintained in several other contexts, this is a very unsatisfactory account of political reality in modern societies; but it is also a problematic basis for thinking of the legal category of citizenship and the nature of human interdependence.
Go Beardie! I’m wholly unrepentant in my long-held view that he would make the best possible keynote speaker for a major gathering of the public-sector “transformation” community. Tell me: who else in any position of authority is articulate at this level, and thinks it’s important to work from basic principles and beliefs as we re-engineer and codify the relationship between people and they state? Not over[paid Touche Accentroid Young, nor dazed and confused Sir Bonar and Sir Wally, nor the egomanic great clunking fist.
We can’t even broach this conversation in the public media without the Sun screaming treason and some Kirsty or Johannes Humphrissimus Maximus Interromptor interrupting everyone half way through their first sentence. It is, to quote a phrase, far from ideal.
Look what Will-i-am (what a cool name, like a William version of Sam-i-am from Green Eggs and Ham) from the Black-Eyed Peas did with Barack Obama’s losing speech at New Hampshire, now spreading via Youtube:
Wow. Warning to politically-minded British pop stars: Do not try this with the great clunking fist, or indeed with any of them. It won’t work. Obama has a special lyrical content.
In the wake of the HMRC data fiasco I wrote to my MP about my concerns about centralised health records. Jeremy Hunt replied within 18 hours (which must be some sort of record), wrote to the Minister, and has now forwarded me the reply - see below.
Thank you for your email of 30 November to Alan Johnson enclosing correspondence
from your constituent Mr William Heath...about the security of patient data in the NHS.
Complex health care requires modern IT support. The best research-based estimates
suggest that, in NHS hospitals alone, adverse events that cause harm to patients
occur in ten per cent of admissions. The information that enables safe and efficient
care is not always available under current systems. Medication errors, poor record
documentation and communication failures are among the top five causes of harm to
patients.
The new IT systems and services being delivered by the Department’s NHS
Connecting for Health agency via the National Programme for IT in the NHS, with the
NHS Care Records Service (NHS CRS) at its core, will ensure easier and constant
access to up-to-date information that will enable efficient diagnosis and treatment.
The new systems will contribute to a reduction in the rate of errors by providing
decision support, as well as tools that can improve communication and reduce drug
transcribing errors. They will mean fewer lost records and test results; fewer
unnecessary repeat procedures; more and better self care by patients able to access
essential information about themselves; and improved confidentiality compared with
that offered by paper filing, with associated cost and time savings from cutting down
on filing and storing of paper files. These are the benefits against which concerns
about security must be balanced.
A key reality is that the NHS is already heavily dependent on the use of stand-alone
IT systems for holding patient information. However, by contrast to many existing
systems, the new systems and services incorporate stringent security controls and
safeguards to prevent unrestricted or uncontrolled access to personal information.
Access is controlled via a unique user identity, involving a passcode and ‘smartcard’,
which can only be obtained on verification of identity and through a formal user
registration process. Only those NHS staff that have a legitimate relationship with a
patient will be able to see that patient’s health record.
Under arrangements known as ‘role-based access control’, access to a patient’s care
record is limited to only as much information as is needed for the purpose of the care
required by the patient.
In addition, up-to-the-minute security protection has been designed in and across the
system, and international security standards are applied across all system
implementations. These include the use of encryption with communication links
between systems, and to user interfaces with systems. The quality of both the logical
and physical security of data centres is assured by using both international and British
standards, and all suppliers to the National Programme are contractually bound to
audit their adherence to these.
Over and above these safeguards, the NHS maintains an effective liaison with the
UK’s information security authorities and others for the sharing of relevant advice and
guidance on known information security threats and vulnerabilities.
Implementation of the NHS CRS will have no implications for the rights of patients,
under the Data Protection Act 1998, as far as accessing the information held about
them by NHS bodies. Information will in fact be made more accessible when future
plans are realised for a web-based function called Healthspace
(www.healthspace.nhs.uk). This will, in due course, enable patients access to their
own NHS Care Record, subject to the patient’s consent and the availability of a robust
security and authentication process to ensure that the privacy and confidentiality of
sensitive clinical information is not compromised. Individuals living in ‘early adopter’
areas will soon be able to view a summary of their medical records online.
For safety and ethical reasons, there are very strict rules on altering clinical records,
though health professionals are required to make a note within a record if a patient
disagrees with what has been written. Complete records are essential to protect the
interests of patients and staff, including ensuring that claims of negligence or
malpractice can be investigated. In addition, information contained in records may be
needed to explain why subsequent decisions were taken.
More generally, NHS Connecting for Health’s website
(www.connectingforhealth.nhs.uk) contains an enormous fund of material about every
aspect of the Programme, with a dedicated enquiries team and facilities for fielding
requests for general or specific information on any facet of the agency’s work.
I would urge your constituent to read the Care Record Guarantee, a copy of which I
enclose for his information, so that he fully understands the safeguards that are being
put in place to provide far greater security and confidentiality than has existed in the
NHS in the past. I have also enclosed an information leaflet, which explains what it
will mean for your constituent’s future care if he does not have an NHS Care Record.
If Mr Heath remains concerned about his details being entered onto the NHS Care
Record, it will be possible for him to prevent this from happening. The national
database will be created initially by transferring a limited amount of information from
GP records.
It would be helpful if Mr Heath would ask his GP in writing to ensure a note is made of
his concern and distress and the choice he has made. This is because when the
service starts up in the area, it is his GP practice that will be responsible for the
decision to enter care records on the system.
If Mr Heath is not familiar to his GP practice, he may be asked for some form of
identification. The practice will need to keep a record of his choice and may ask him
to sign a form indicating that he understands and accepts that the NHS may not be
able to treat him as safely or efficiently as others in circumstances where the NHS
Care Record will enable that.
At the time that the NHS Care Record is introduced in your constituent’s area,
Mr Heath’s views will then be known to his GP, who will be provided with guidance on
what he or she needs to do. In the meantime, if local GPs have any questions about
this process, he or she can get advice by e-mail from Professor Michael Thick, the
doctor responsible for safeguarding patient information within the NHS IT Programme,
at: michael.thick@nhs.net. Further information about the NHS CRS is available at
www.nhscarerecords.nhs.uk.
Although there are a small number of health communities that will be affected in 2007,
it is probable that the electronic NHS Summary Care Record will not be created for
the health community where your constituent lives before 2008. When it is introduced
in your area, your constituent will be informed by a letter to his household and other
communications at least two months prior to its introduction, so it is likely that he will
have time to consider this matter further.
We strongly believe that the NHS CRS is a necessary component of the healthcare
that should be provided by the NHS in the 21st Century and we would ask your
constituent to think carefully before making his final decision.
With best wishes
BEN BRADSHAW
Enclosures:-
RISKS AND PROTECTIONS
Staff disclosing information. The NHS already shares information widely and
most NHS staff are honest and trustworthy. However, there are occasional
problems with staff accessing records and disclosing information inappropriately.
With the new NHS systems, the number of staff who will have an opportunity to look
at your clinical records when they should not will be greatly reduced. Only staff with
smartcards can log onto the new NHS systems. This allows the NHS to track
precisely who has done or seen what - and you can ask for this information. Unlike
today, staff will have to be involved in your care to access your records and they will
only see information appropriate to their role.
Hackers. Safeguards that will protect the Summary Care Record from hackers have
been designed by security experts. They are far stronger than the safeguards in
place anywhere within the NHS today.
Wrong information. It is important that the information about you is accurate. All
data that goes into a Summary Care Record will have to pass quality controls. It is
also possible for you to check your record and point out any remaining errors.
Access by the state. No other part of government would have direct access to your
Summary Care Record. As now, any information from your record that the NHS
gives to others, such as the police, would be very strictly limited by law. in fact, the
Summary Care Record gives the opportunity to improve things by ensuring that any
such disclosures follow consistent procedures and are recorded and monitored.
More control by the patient. The greatest safeguards for your Summary Care
Record are that you will be able to see it yourself, know who else has seen it, and
have more control than ever before over what it contains and who has access. You
can ask for it to appear as a blank screen, or ask for information to be removed or
not added in the first place. Later on, additional controls will allow you to let staff see
some parts of your Summary Care Record, but not others.
The first Summary Care Records will be launched in spring 2007 in one Primary
Care Trust and slowly build from there. The Department will proceed with caution
and learn from these early adopters. Yours will, of course, not be created when this
happens.
The Department hopes that the information provided has made clear the practical
results of your decision. Please be assured that the Department of Health is
committed to honouring your decision and doing all it can to ensure you get the best
healthcare possible. You can, of course, change your mind at any time. We urge
you to review your decision from time to time.
IF YOU DO NOT HAVE A SUMMARY CARE RECORD
You have decided that you do not want to have a Summary Care Record. The NHS
will do its best to provide you with safe, efficient care whether or not you have a
Summary Care Record. The purpose of this information sheet is to ensure that you
are clear what your decision could mean for your NHS care.
The Summary Care Record’s purpose is to ensure that anyone treating you has
basic but important information about you, especially when care is unplanned,
urgent or during evenings and weekends. At first this would be limited to your
current medications, known allergies and any bad reactions to medicines in the past.
When you next saw your GP, important information about conditions such as asthma
or diabetes could be added if you agreed. Over time, other significant information
such as referrals, discharges, and test results could be added if you wished.
The information in your Summary Care Record could save you and the NHS time,
but could also one day save your life. The NHS has significant problems now with
lost records and test results, treatment and prescribing errors. They lead to
thousands of preventable deaths and injuries every year.
With a Summary Care Record doctors and nurses would know at a crucial time:
what medications you are taking, especially if they are many and complex;
what medications have not agreed with you in the past;
whether you have any allergies;
whether new medications they prescribe may react badly with things you are already taking; and
that you have a condition that means you should not have certain medicines.
In addition, you would have the benefits of:
round-the-clock access to your own Summary Care Record through
Healthspace, to check it for errors and to see what those who are treating
you have recorded; and
peace of mind that wherever in England you needed care, anyone treating
you would have essential information even if you were distressed or did not
remember details.
Later on, as your Summary Care Record developed, you would be able to use it to:
see your test results as they come in;
check that your referral letters have been written;
remind yourself about important things said to you about your treatment; and
inform NHS staff about your needs and how you want to be treated.
It would be misleading to pretend that there are no risks to information held in the
Summary Care Record. However, it is also misleading to suggest that not having
such a record is risk free. Substantial work is taking place to modernise the NHS,
including the introduction of the Summary Care Record, in order to reduce errors,
save lives and improve health outcomes for a great many people. Modernising and
computerising the NHS also brings with it new safeguards to ensure that information
in your records is held more securely than in the past.
The Treasury is to review spending on government IT projects in an effort to halt a series of scandals as Gordon Brown’s ambitions to computerise public services were dealt another blow yesterday [ref HMRC latest]...A major review of public spending will seek to draw lessons from recent IT disasters, which have cost the tax billions, The Times has learn. The review, to be conducted by Yvette Cooper, the new Chief Secretary to the Treasury, will look at IT procurement in several areas.
A Treasury source said that the review, across a dozen areas of government spending, would seek to “ensure better value for money” for future IT projects. A recent survey revealed that the cost to the taxpayer of abandoned Whitehall computer projects since 2000 had reached £2 billion...This comes days after the Prime Minister asked Paul Murphy, the Welsh Secretary, to chair a new cabinet committee on IT and information security, suggesting renewed interest from No 10 in the area.
This has got to stop. Britain’s snooper state is getting completely out of hand. We are sleepwalking into a surveillance society, and we must wake up. When the Stasi started spying on me, as I moved around East Germany 30 years ago, I travelled on the assumption that I was coming from one of the freest countries in the world to one of the least free. I don’t think I was wrong then, but I would certainly be wrong now. Today, the people of East Germany are much less spied upon than the people of Britain...An over-mighty executive, authoritarian busybody instincts at all levels of government, a political culture of “commonsense” bureaucratic judgments, rather than codified rights protected by supreme courts and, until recently, a gung-ho press forever calling for “something to be done”: this fateful combination has made Britain a dark outrider among liberal democracies. The birthplace of laissez-faire liberalism has morphed into the database state. We have more CCTV cameras than anyone. We have the largest DNA database anywhere. Plans are far advanced to centralise all our medical records and introduce the most elaborate biometric ID cards in the world. All this from a government which, having collected so much data on us, goes around losing it like a late-night drunk spreading the contents of his pockets down the street…
. It’s compact, powerful stuff - worth a full read.
He attracts a lot deal of comment, mostly less abusive than other CommentisFree pieces. David Moss asks what the IPS actually does all day:
In any normal business, if you tried to convince the board to market a product you can’t describe to people you cannot name for reasons which, after six years, you still can’t list, you would be ignored. Imagine what the Dragons in the Den would do to IPS if they turned up to make a presentation.
The government cannot disregard reality. Reality is daily attracting ridicule to the NIS and daily destroying confidence in the government. The NIS cannot achieve its objectives. It cannot help to fight crime and terrorism or to deliver more efficient public services. Meanwhile, thanks to the global mobile phone network, we already have a superior ID card scheme anyway, so we don’t need the NIS – that is the government’s escape route from mirage and back to reality.
Since chip implants work so well on dogs the Ministry of Justice, encouraged by Acpo, favours trying to put RFID tags into prisoners and monitoring them by satellite (Independent).
For individuals with multiple needs, an overarching assessment should bring together pieces of information that would otherwise be scattered across the system. Frontline practitioners should build on this knowledge base when reviewing progress or designing support. This assessment process should build on progress made through the Common Assessment Framework (CAF) for children and young people, implemented as part of the Every Child Matters agenda. The CAF provides a shared and holistic assessment for children and young people with additional needs. It takes account of family risk factors and can therefore also help to identify and direct support towards the unmet needs of other family members – a parent’s learning disability, or an older sibling’s substance misuse, for example.
(these last two items thanks to FIPR Alerts).
I’d love it if these were all absurd hoaxes, but I fear not. After a burst of disasters based on a toxic blend of arrogance and ignorance, the tribe has gone completely mad. There’s no sense in implementing policies which make everyne hate the police and prison officers or clam up with the GP or teacher they despreately need to talk to about personal problems. Human dignity isn’t incidental to government: it’s the underlying purpose.
Public servants should listen. Needy people are uncomplicated and articulate about what their needs are. Government should remember at all times, however clever it feels, that it is the servant not the master. While you’re at it stop bloody photographing us. As the philanderer Boris Johnson says in Taking Liberties, just butt out of it.
Gordon Brown and Jacqui Smith are determined to reverse the decision to downgrade the drug when the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs completes its report in the next few months. While its recommendations are not yet known, ministers are already making plain that the Home Secretary is prepared to overrule the expert body if necessary.
But....but....but....Why did God give him ears? It’s as pointless as putting indicators on a London taxi.
Of course we can already do the PM (who gives most petitions short shrift). But Parliament is ours. The techniques and values of the contempory Interweb have a tremendous and different potential among the full panoply of our elected representatives with all their diversity, black rods and committees. (Remember too how scared they are of direct Presidential style and how weirdly this makes them behave). Anyway, the procedures committee rubric says:
The House of Commons has given its support in principle to an e-petitions scheme with the following key elements:
• Members should be engaged with e-petitions as they are with written petitions;
• e-petitions should be open for the addition of e-signatures for a certain period before
formal presentation;
• once presented they should have the same status as written petitions.
The e-consultation will let the public give their views on e-petitioning. The Committee wants to know whether people would use an e-petitioning system and, if so, what they would expect from it.
Let's say what we want from e-enabled government. Let's observe government first-hand. Let's say "Wouldn't It Be Better If" (WIBBI). Become an ethnographer of bureaucracy today! It beats getting frustrated with public services.
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