Big Brother Awards 2003: The Winners.

A prize for those who violate the privacy of citizens, with great zeal and senzavergogna: In England and the Privacy International Association haannunciato the winners of the sixth edition of the Big Brother Awards . Lemedaglie of gold, representing a boot that leaves its mark Suuna human head, will be assigned to five different categories: the aziendapiu intrusive, the government organization most despicable, the peggiorefunzionario, the project most horrible, the permanent threat. Among leaziende, won Capita (the company behind many projects of the government movie-watching), which has by far the most discutibilidell'amministrazione patterns of data. Among the associations, that of ufficialidi police beating other competitors because recently andataoltre the mere opportunism developing a more active role in the invasive promozionedi attitudes. For the category "officials", the prize andatoa and Ken Livingstone, the Mayor of London, because of his obsession with lasorveglianza on transportation. In this class, the interior minister David Blunkett had received the most nominations, but suetrasgressioni were so serious as to promote it to compete nellacategoria "permanent threat." Among the projects, the best and was the "data sharing" proposed by the PIU, the Committee on the performance and innovation, which has defeated, among others, the project on votoelettronico. To embody the true permanent threat and Tony Blair, with DavidBlunkett to tallonarlo closely. The prime minister and earned lievevantaggio for his active participation in the ongoing attacks on libertacivili inflicted by the government. And David Blunkett? Its role and result cosiodioso to push the judges to decide to save on aconiare medal and a special prize, consisting of a dog shit mounted on unbastoncino.