UK 'sleep walking' to privatised Big Brother state
We speak to Rob Halfon MP, who believes the UK is heading towards becoming a privatised Big Brother state.


The UK is "sleep walking" its way into a privatised Big Brother state thanks to a lack of adequate regulation.
This was the view of Conservative MP and internet privacy campaigner Rob Halfon, who IT PRO caught up with today.
While there are certainly issues with the Government hoarding data on the populace, companies are doing exactly the same, he said.
"We are living in an age ... where our passwords and whatnot are being scraped and being handed out to middlemen who then sell them on to whoever wants it," Halfon claimed.
"Because the law is so unclear they seem to be harvesting our private details without our permission."
An internet bill of rights
In the past few months, Halfon has been calling for an internet bill of rights and for the law in this country to change before the nation slips into a "privatised surveillance society."
Get the ITPro daily newsletter
Sign up today and you will receive a free copy of our Future Focus 2025 report - the leading guidance on AI, cybersecurity and other IT challenges as per 700+ senior executives
Indeed, the Harlow MP has been campaigning heavily for Government action, having held the first parliamentary debate on internet privacy something that was perhaps a little late in coming.
Nevertheless, the debate was needed and Halfon, who was spurred on by the recent Google Street View scandal, was given deserved praise for his efforts.
"My hope is that a bill of rights would guarantee the rights of consumers as well as protecting their property rights, because in essence if people are stealing emails over Wi-Fi, that is your property," he added.
Tea and crumpets with Google
Halfon's ire has been directed predominantly at the Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), in particular its handling of the Google case, which Halfon labelled as "farcical."
"What's amazing is that the ICO... went and had tea and crumpets at Google and they sent a couple of lawyers over and no technical staff," he told us.
"I think the ICO is not fit for purpose. I'm not yet clear as to whether it is because of the people or because of the way it's been set up but it's certainly not fit for purpose in its current form. It needs to have clear direction about what it should be doing."
Tom Brewster is currently an associate editor at Forbes and an award-winning journalist who covers cyber security, surveillance, and privacy. Starting his career at ITPro as a staff writer and working up to a senior staff writer role, Tom has been covering the tech industry for more than ten years and is considered one of the leading journalists in his specialism.
He is a proud alum of the University of Sheffield where he secured an undergraduate degree in English Literature before undertaking a certification from General Assembly in web development.
-
AI recruitment tools are still a privacy nightmare – here's how the ICO plans to crack down on misuse
News The ICO has issued guidance for recruiters and AI developers after finding that many are mishandling data
By Emma Woollacott
-
“You must do better”: Information Commissioner John Edwards calls on firms to beef up support for data breach victims
News Companies need to treat victims with swift, practical action, according to the ICO
By Emma Woollacott
-
LinkedIn backtracks on AI training rules after user backlash
News UK-based LinkedIn users will now get the same protections as those elsewhere in Europe
By Emma Woollacott
-
UK's data protection watchdog deepens cooperation with National Crime Agency
News The two bodies want to improve the support given to organizations experiencing cyber attacks and ransomware recovery
By Emma Woollacott
-
ICO slams Electoral Commission over security failures
News The Electoral Commission has been reprimanded for poor security practices, including a failure to install security updates and weak password policies
By Emma Woollacott
-
Disgruntled ex-employees are using ‘weaponized’ data subject access requests to pester firms
News Some disgruntled staff are using DSARs as a means to pressure former employers into a financial settlement
By Emma Woollacott
-
ICO reprimands Coventry school over repeated data protection failures
News The ICO said the academy trust failed to follow previous guidance, which caused a serious data breach
By Emma Woollacott
-
ICO dishes out fine to HelloFresh for marketing spam campaign
News HelloFresh failed to offer proper opt-outs, the ICO said, and customers weren’t warned their data would be used for months after they cancelled
By Emma Woollacott