UK planning to team up with "big tech" in next pandemic for "whole-of-society" "live location data" and AI surveillance (reclaimthenet.org)
from StopTech@lemmy.today to privacy@lemmy.ml on 02 Apr 00:20
https://lemmy.today/post/50424713

cross-posted from: lemmy.today/post/50424637

UKHSA will explore options to work with ‘big tech’ to use live location data and artificial intelligence (AI) for a more rapid, large-scale detection and alert system during pandemics. These services will adopt a whole-of-society approach with accessible and multilingual formats, and UKHSA will work to consider and build the equivalent tools needed for digitally excluded communities.

gov.uk/…/uk-government-approach-to-implementing-t…

#privacy

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sic_semper_tyrannis@lemmy.today on 02 Apr 02:48 next collapse

🤦

randompasta@lemmy.today on 02 Apr 02:55 next collapse

Sounds like they want another pandemic.

Thorned_Rose@sh.itjust.works on 02 Apr 08:36 collapse

Biggest wealth transfer in human recorded history so of course they do.

verdi@tarte.nuage-libre.fr on 02 Apr 07:25 next collapse

1984

NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 02 Apr 09:28 next collapse

Phew, for a moment there I thought they worked for us, the people.

cheers_queers@lemmy.zip on 02 Apr 11:45 next collapse

learned the wrong lessons from covid, huh? color me shocked

racoon@lemmy.ml on 02 Apr 11:56 collapse

*In the shock doctrine, Naomi Klein argues that neoliberal economic policies promoted by Milton Friedman and the Chicago school of economics have risen to global prominence because of a deliberate strategy she calls “disaster capitalism”. In this strategy, political actors exploit the chaos of natural disasters, wars, and other crises to push through unpopular policies such as deregulation and privatization.

This economic “shock therapy” favors corporate interests while disadvantaging and disenfranchising citizens when they are too distracted and overwhelmed to respond or resist effectively. The book challenges the narrative that free market capitalist policies have been welcomed by the inhabitants of regions where they have been implemented, and it argues that several man-made events, including the Iraq War, were intentionally undertaken with the goal of pushing through these unpopular policies in their wake.*

StopTech@lemmy.today on 02 Apr 13:04 collapse

I’m much more concerned about crises being an excuse to expand government powers than to privatize or deregulate. That’s the problem in this particular instance too. Both can be bad but expanding government powers is almost always bad.