Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance

Information technologies now play a huge role in both personal and institutional life, playing the role of a global communications medium. As our means of interaction increasingly centre on the internet, there is a desire from nation states to exercise control and obtain access to the communications...

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Main Author: Joss Wright
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society 2013-08-01
Series:Internet Policy Review
Subjects:
Online Access:https://policyreview.info/node/184
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author Joss Wright
author_facet Joss Wright
author_sort Joss Wright
collection DOAJ
description Information technologies now play a huge role in both personal and institutional life, playing the role of a global communications medium. As our means of interaction increasingly centre on the internet, there is a desire from nation states to exercise control and obtain access to the communications of citizens. The stated reasons for this access and control are to prevent or investigate crimes, and to protect national security. This article argues that mass untargeted surveillance of internet-based communications is an excessive tool with respect to its potential for abuse against both society and individuals, and that its ability to prevent crime or terrorism are limited. By looking at existing technologies and example cases where surveillance has been applied, this article demonstrates that there are both inherent mathematical and technical limits to the potential for surveillance to achieve broad-scale prevention of crime and terrorism. In addition, the potential of surveillance to result in real harm to society necessarily places severe limits on how this technique should be applied in a free and democratic society.
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spelling doaj-art-c67dae3b0aa248b4b8c80d785cfd9d592025-08-20T02:46:39ZengAlexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet and SocietyInternet Policy Review2197-67752013-08-012310.14763/2013.3.184Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillanceJoss Wright0Oxford Internet InstituteInformation technologies now play a huge role in both personal and institutional life, playing the role of a global communications medium. As our means of interaction increasingly centre on the internet, there is a desire from nation states to exercise control and obtain access to the communications of citizens. The stated reasons for this access and control are to prevent or investigate crimes, and to protect national security. This article argues that mass untargeted surveillance of internet-based communications is an excessive tool with respect to its potential for abuse against both society and individuals, and that its ability to prevent crime or terrorism are limited. By looking at existing technologies and example cases where surveillance has been applied, this article demonstrates that there are both inherent mathematical and technical limits to the potential for surveillance to achieve broad-scale prevention of crime and terrorism. In addition, the potential of surveillance to result in real harm to society necessarily places severe limits on how this technique should be applied in a free and democratic society.https://policyreview.info/node/184SurveillanceIntelligence servicesBase rate fallacyInterceptionFundamental principlesPredictive algorithms
spellingShingle Joss Wright
Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
Internet Policy Review
Surveillance
Intelligence services
Base rate fallacy
Interception
Fundamental principles
Predictive algorithms
title Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
title_full Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
title_fullStr Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
title_short Necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
title_sort necessary and inherent limits to internet surveillance
topic Surveillance
Intelligence services
Base rate fallacy
Interception
Fundamental principles
Predictive algorithms
url https://policyreview.info/node/184
work_keys_str_mv AT josswright necessaryandinherentlimitstointernetsurveillance