The Web as filtered (and hopefully enriched ;-) by Adrian McEwen

Post-Snowden Linking

Over the past month or two, since the Edward Snowden leaks surfaced, there have been a number of articles and stories written about both privacy and the security services. However, particularly in the UK, there has been something of a collective shrug and not as much outcry as I believe there should have been. Yet I haven’t written anything about it so far, which makes me part of the problem as much as anyone else.

I still don’t have a good handle on what I think we should be doing in response, but consider this a first stab at helping to correct my silence on the issue.

This is more of a marshalling of an assortment of the articles that I’ve wanted to write a response to, hopefully grouped into something approaching a sensible number of ways to frame things.

Firstly, there’s the should the state be gathering this much data on its citizens? side of things:

Then there’s the what can I do as a concerned citizen to make my life more private and secure (from everyone, not just big brother). I’ve lost some of the links I’d have put in here, as this blog post has been too long in gestation. However, contributing to the Open Rights Group, and particularly their Privacy Not Prism campaign is a good start. And not particularly security-focused, but Redecentralize.org is looking to highlight people working on ways to break the centralisation of the Internet - and thus its increasing single points of failure.

Finally, what us technologists should be doing in how we approach building the services people use:

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