aftermath
The comments have now been published. I saw them in the guardian. I don't see the points most commenters were expecting. His premises:
- privacy rights are often breached, but mainly by data collection businesses
- misuse of the 2000 terrorist act by (local) offices
- coroners and justice bill - daft name, though I'm all for justice for coroners - is well intentioned but open to abuse. However, he considers it misconceived that ID data will be misused, the point most heatedly disagreed with by database professionals here.
- data should be retained where useful by the specialists, not in central silos
Low points: He takes a gratuitous swipe at pontifs preaching big brother Britain, i.e. single voices rather than the obvious general unease, and denies we can judge how policed a state is. Here he conveniently ignores the idea of comparison over time - anyone can compare the past with the present efficiently, and most would agree official intrusion is increasing.
He concludes that we have to challenge sophisticated means of monitoring and assert ourselves lest the mistakes of the past allow those in power to abuse their position.
For me they are the right conclusions, I can't follow how he got there, though.