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UK Government Plans £12 bn Database To Track All Emails, Phone Calls and Browsing Sessions

UK Government Plans £12 bn Database To Track All Emails, Phone Calls and Browsing Sessions
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In a move that would certainly have given shivers to the late George Orwell, the UK Government is apparently planning a gigantic £12 bn database that will log and track internet browsing habits, emails and phone records of everyone living in Britain.

The project, which would make the controversial Phorm looks like small change, has already been allocated a whopping £1 bn fund to kickstart the first stage of the project as reported by Times Online on Sunday.

The Government Communications Headquarters, which is the official ears and eyes of the Home Office, will be in charge of handling the project and has already enlisted the help of BT and Vodafone, two of UK's biggest service providers.

More details will be unveiled next month during the Queen's speech after ministers have agreed in principle to this Super-Phorm which will have to process the estimated 60 billion text messages and 1.2 trillion emails that will be in the UK this year alone.

It will also almost certainly work in tandem with the existing US-based Echelon project and will as usual be a "vital" tool to combat terrorism and organised crime.

The UK government has already come under heavy criticisms for the way it has handled the Identity Card programme which will be rolled out in the forthcoming months and for the massive data losses it has suffered in the past year.

Desire Athow

Posted by Desire Athow on 06 Oct. 2008

Désiré Athow is the Content Editor for ITProportal.com and has been writing tech articles for nearly a decade. You can follow him on Twitter.

Tags: Good to Know, Government, Internet, Legal issues, Logging/Tracking, National Security, Phorm