POLICE STATE: UK Spies Using Social Media Data for Mass Surveillance
Privacy rights group Privacy International says it has obtained evidence for the first time that UK spy agencies are collecting social media information on potentially millions of people.
It has also obtained letters it says show the intelligence agencies’ oversight body had not been informed that UK intelligence agencies had shared bulk databases of personal data with foreign governments, law enforcement and industry — raising concerns about effective oversight of the mass surveillance programs.
The documents have come out as a result of an ongoing legal challenge Privacy International has brought against UK intelligence agencies’ use of bulk personal data collection as an investigatory power. (The group also has various other active legal challenges, including to state hacking).
It says now that the Investigatory Powers Commissioner’s Office (IPCO) oversight body “sought immediate inspection when secret practices came to light” as a result of its litigation.
The use by UK spooks of so-called bulk personal datasets (BPDs) — aka massive databases of personal information — was only publicly revealed in March 2015, via an Intelligence and Security Committee report, which also raised various concerns about their use.
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Cities are getting paid to turn street lights into spying SmartNodes
Source: Mass Private I
The future of privacy in big cities is bleak, cities are now getting paid to convert street lights into spying SmartNodes.What are SmartNodes?
SmartNodes will soon replace street lights, because they are equipped with cameras, microphones, speakers etc., all-in-one light pole.
The city of Los Angeles, Calfornia is working with Phillips Lighting and ENE-HUB to turn 110,000 street lights into a one-of-a-kind citywide SmartNode surveillance network.
Phillips SmartPoles are equipped with ‘environmental noise monitoring’ microphones. Phillips microphones are designed to spy on ‘raucous neighbors and loud music’.
Where could the music be coming from you ask?
Phillips doesn’t say, but you can bet they mean people, vehicles and
homes. Which means, SmartPoles can listen to more than just noise.(Click
here to watch Phillips Lighting admit SmartPoles are great data collecting conduits.)In the above video, Remco Muijs boasts that Phillips and the city of Los Angeles are working together to host third-party sensors that influence people’s behavior.
Because nothing says influencing people’s behavior, quite like 110,000 spying street lights.
Companies are paying cities to install spying SmartPoles
An article in PTC reveals that private companies are paying cities $1200 yearly, for each SmartPole they install.
“The streetlight-based cells will generate revenues by being leased to wireless providers. The City of Los Angeles will receive $1200 per year for each SmartPole. The installation of 100 IoT-connected streetlights is currently in process in Los Angeles. Philips and the city plan to expand the network to 600 streetlights by 2018. Philips, under a tech development pilot program, is also installing 50 SmartPoles in The City of San Jose.”
To translate that into dollar figures, if Los Angeles turns 110,000 light poles into SmartPole’s they would make approximately $13.2 million a year.
And with that much money at stake, it won’t be long before every city in America turns their street lights into money making, spying SmartPoles.
SmartNodes are all about surveillance
image credit: ENE-HUB
Last year, I warned everyone that DHS and the TSA are installing microphones on light posts to spy on commuters.But ENE-HUB’s, SmartNode’s make those light posts, look like child’s play.
ENE-HUB’s brochure, reveals they are equipped with Wi-Fi detectors, microphones, CCTV cameras, speakers and travel card readers which I assume means transit car readers. (Click here to find out more.)
SmartNodes also come equipped with…
- Telecommunications
- RBG Beacon Light
- Wi-Fi
- LED Street and roadway lighting
- Community messaging
- Parking management
- Data capture
- Surveillance
- Microphone
- People counting
- Electric vehicle car charging
- Traditional smart pole functions (signage, traffic and lighting)
ENE-HUB’s ‘benefits’ section admits that governments can use multiple revenue streams to spy on their citizens for 25-30 years. (Click here to watch ENE-HUB’s smart city video.)
Unfortunately, Phillips Lighting and ENE-HUB aren’t the only ones trying to turn entire cities into giant surveillance networks.
Four months ago, I warned everyone that Siemens, GE, Cisco, LED lighting maker Acuity Brands and mall developer Simon Property Group are also installing spying SmartNodes across the country.
After writing numerous articles about Smart Cities, SmartPoles and SmartNodes one thing becomes crystal clear.
They are all about corporate/government surveillance.