Big Brother Award, ironic awards to attacking privacy.

. Hacktivism

06:03:02 Big Brother Award, ironic awards to attacking privacy.
The plans of the British government to store all email and web traffic has been 'rewarded' with the annual Big Brother Award (pictured), an award founded in 1998 by 'Privacy International', an organization that seeks to control and protect human rights at the international level. The schemes of implementation of the government's plan have been described in the Anti-Terrorism Act and are the result of the National Criminal Intelligence Service. Other awards went to Sir Richard Wilson, for his commitment nell'osteggiare freedom of information, data protection and responsibility of different ministries. In the category 'Lifetime Menace' have returned to the appropriations for the introduction of identity cards across the nation, which would lead to a strange sharing of data between government, security agencies and private companies. The Department for Education and Skills' has been named as the 'most atrocious state organization', for creating a system of tracking students, while the 'Most Invasive Organisation Award' went to Norwich Union for its projects of satellite tracking vehicles. But there were awards to those who have tried to defend the privacy effectively, as Ilka Schröder, the German Greens, for his investigations on the American Echelon spy system, which have significantly contributed to the subsequent investigations of the European Parliament.