28 October 1998


To: ukcrypto@maillist.ox.ac.uk
Subject: Big Brother winners -- guess who ;)
Date: Wed, 28 Oct 1998 15:38:58 +0100
From: Ian BROWN <I.Brown@cs.ucl.ac.uk>

THE 1998 UK BIG BROTHER AWARD WINNERS
(the baddies)

PRODUCT AWARD

HARLEQUIN which has created the WatCall telephone
traffic analysis system which allows police to analyse
telephone records to create "friendship networks" which
are then linked to existing police intelligence systems to
automatically target people who are of interest. This
activity takes place without the issue of any warrant.


CORPORATE AWARD

PROCUREMENT SERVICES INTERNATIONAL. One of
the more malodorous UK organisations exporting
surveillance equipment to such military regimes as
Indonesia and Nigeria. Its equipment has been used to
aid the genocide of the East Timor population.


LOCAL GOVERNMENT AWARD

NEWHAM COUNCIL for its Mandrake automatic face
recognition system. The council has installed this
software for the areas 140 cameras. It intends to
automatically identify people "of interest" to authorities.


NATIONAL GOVERNMENT AWARD

THE DEPARTMENT OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY for its
promotion of bad encryption policy, particularly the
farcical white paper on Trusted Third Parties in 1997.


PEOPLE'S CHOICE WINNER  

JACK STRAW  For invasion of privacy above and beyond the 
call of duty. Justification includes the Police Act, treatment 
of asylum seekers, extention of police powers and
information gathering practices, secret activities within
the European K4 (Justice and Home Affairs) Committee,
and and the development of "conflict management"
strategies that allow police to store information on
protesters, travellers or anybody else they believe may
threaten public order.


LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARD

MENWITH HILL SIGNALS INTELLIGENCE BASE
(Yorkshire), the world largest spy station, built and
operated by the US National Security Agency. Its
ECHELON keyword recognition system, used to dragnet
global communications, was last month debated by the
European Parliament.



THE WINSTON AWARDS
(the goodies)

SCHNEWS is a Brighton based weekly newsletter
which for the past three years has done a great deal to
raise awareness of privacy and surveillance issues,
particularly those which the mainstream media refuse to
touch. Its small team works on a voluntary basis, and the
publication (which is free) is seen as one of the most
influential civil liberties organs in Britain.

LINDIS PERCY has for many years fought to raise
awareness of the activities of the US National Security
Agency, particularly relating to Menwith Hill, the
agency's key spy base, located in Yorkshire. She has
been arrested more than 150 times, and has recently
been jailed for her actions, despite being a quaker and a
pacifist.

ALAN LODGE is a Leeds photographer who has spent
more than a decade raising awareness of front-line
police surveillance activities, particularly the endemic
practice of photogrtaphing demonstrators and activists.

ESTHER BULL is a 19 year old student who last year
discovered that her landlord had placed a video camera
behind a two way mirror in her bathroom. Esther had
been filmed secretly for nearly two years, but the lack of
a privacy law meant that the perpetrator could only be
prosecuted under the "bad landlord" laws. She has
helped form the "Operation Peeping Tom" campaign to
encourage other victims to tell their story.

HARRY COHEN is a Labour MP who has consistently
worked to strengthen data protection by introducing
private members bills. He has frequently been a lone
voice in Parliament on this issue.