The power of big data is amazing. It helps find patterns you weren't looking for or didn't even know exhisted.
and even helps create patterns that didn't exist at all.
The power of big data is amazing. It helps find patterns you weren't looking for or didn't even know exhisted.
and even helps create patterns that didn't exist at all.
This is literally like that recent episode of southpark where denmark gets access to everyone's data and everyone freaks out because of their internet history![]()
Just wait until it's hacked and leaked all over the internet.
With the leaks from Edward Snowden, isn't it true the government are doing this sort of thing in tandem with the NSA anyway?
I'm fairly certain in the interview tapes of Snowden he tells the Guardian reporter that the UK is getting up to things even the USA wasn't doing at the time.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/nov/01/prism-slides-nsa-document
Yeah but now its legal they can dtart using it to prosecute you.
They couldnt take you to court with illegal evidence now its legal they can.
Say what happens if one of the copywrite groups gets access and decides to make a civil case against everyone who visited any of the well known streaming sites?
I was under the impression that its the sharing that gets you in trouble, not the viewing.
Well broadband prices are going to go up.
Iirc each site blocked costs around £3k per year maintenance costs which will get passed down to us.
With the leaks from Edward Snowden, isn't it true the government are doing this sort of thing in tandem with the NSA anyway?
I'm fairly certain in the interview tapes of Snowden he tells the Guardian reporter that the UK is getting up to things even the USA wasn't doing at the time.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/interactive/2013/nov/01/prism-slides-nsa-document
Don't underestimate the power of big data harvesting. We're already doing this on a small scale at my place for monitoring and it's amazing how much stuff you can tie together as long as you have some sort of common key or keys. The thought of this technique applied to the general public's browsing data is quite scary. It's not hard to extrapolate and think that people could be denied life insurance policies because of medical conditions or symptoms they've searched for.
Even if the government don't have the processing power to do much useful with it right now, the legislation will be in place already and that power *will* come in the future to fully exploit the law. It's frightening and I'd urge everyone to stick two fingers up by using a VPN.
Repealing this will stand little chance to be honest since labour and the tories support it, the only ones who didn't were the lib dems.
Also, I don't think you can be prosecuted based on events before the law goes in place - it can only be applied for data collected after the law has been applied. Don't think it's received assent yet.
It's very likely they've been collecting logs for years anyway.
Its because we dont have punitive fines.
The max they can go after you for is the cost of the film/show etc
Uploading rhey can **** you royally though.
But if theyve got a years worth of your streaming history at cinema ticket/blu ray prices that could.be a bill in the thousands.
.and once theyve won a few it would just become a "you've been caught streaming pay the 50 quid fine or we take you to court for the full ammount" excercise