
But Blair is the 'Biggest Brother' of all...
Published: 25 March 2003 15:16 GMT
London Mayor Ken Livingstone has been awarded the dubious honour of 'Worst Public Servant' at the annual Big Brother awards for his leading roll in the implementation of the London Congestion Charge scheme and the surveillance system underpinning it. Tony Blair walked award with the 'Lifetime Menace' award.
The controversial Congestion Charge has reduced traffic in London and encouraged more people to use public transport but privacy groups claim the intrusion of surveillance technology, which monitors drivers entering the charge zone in central London, is a breach of civil liberties.
At the same ceremony, Blair was named 'Lifetime Menace' for his part in spearheading what organisers Privacy International called the "government's attack on civil liberties".
At the heart of the government's intrusion is the proposed legislation which would force ISPs and telecoms companies to retain all electronic communication data - such as emails and web pages visited - for 12 months.
Simon Davies, director of Privacy International, identified the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001 as being a major factor in increased levels of surveillance.
Davies said in a statement: "The judges were overwhelmed this year with a vast number of malodorous nominations. Many politicians and companies since the 11 September attacks jumped onto the security bandwagon without any justification."
Other awards went to Capita - the company behind London's congestion charging scheme, among other projects - which scooped 'Most Invasive Company', while The Association of Chief Police Officers walked away with 'Most Heinous Government Organisation'.
A posthumous Winston - the organiser's award recognising individual efforts to protect people's privacy - went to computer pioneer and Cambridge Professor Dr Roger Needham. Teri Dowty won plaudits for co-ordinating the Children's Rights Alliance for England and Wales. Marion Chester, legal director, Association of Community Health Councils of England and Wales, STAND, Richard Norton-Taylor and Stuart Millar of the Guardian, and Undercurrents were all also awarded a Winston.
See below details of a SAP Basis positions offered by Huxley Associates, this permanent position and will be paying up to 40-45k based in North ...
Based in South Wales, this highly successful company are looking to bring on board an experienced IT Manager within their manufacturing site. An ...
Embedded C/C++ Real Time / STB / DVB - South Wales - Up to 40,000 My rapidly expanding client in South Wales are urgently seeking an embedded C/C++ ...
CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.
July 10th: Just MASH Marketing: The Customer Reference Mashup
GMP Calibration Software Implementations: Containing Costs and Managing Risk
Braskem: Invests in Intel Processor-Based Hardware Consolidation and Standardization...
AGA Linde Healthcare Transforms Sales and Service Processes With PeopleSoft Enterprise...
Stories from the web...
Copyright ©1995-2008 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved. Top of page
Simon Moores Why I'm planning a change of career IT just isn't fun any more…
Martin Atherton Time to green-light sustainable IT But think it through first…