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      UK surveillance legislation

      • Tuesday, 4 March, 2025
        Cyber Security
        Apple launches legal challenge to UK ‘back door’ order

        iPhone maker files complaint to Investigatory Powers Tribunal over demand to access encrypted data

        A man uses an iPhone
      • Friday, 7 February, 2025
        Apple Inc
        UK orders Apple to give it access to encrypted cloud data

        Bid to tap customers’ accounts could weaken security for iPhone users all over the world

        Montage shows a mobile phone with the iCloud login page against a Westminster backdrop
      • Friday, 23 February, 2024
        Serco Group PLC
        Outsourcer Serco ordered to stop using facial recognition to monitor staff

        UK watchdog cracks down for first time on an employer processing biometric data of workers

        A logo sign outside of a facility occupied by Serco in Columbia
      • Tuesday, 12 September, 2023
        UK
        ECHR rules UK spy agencies violated privacy of Italian and US nationals

        Two men took their case to Strasbourg after British regulator refused to hear case because they were non-residents

        European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg
      • Tuesday, 6 June, 2023
        UK to strip Chinese surveillance cameras from sensitive government sites

        Ministers to publish timeline for removal of equipment manufactured by companies including Dahua and Hikvision

        Hikvision CCTV cameras
      • Monday, 15 May, 2023
        UK policing minister pushes for greater use of facial recognition

        Chris Philp expressed desire to expand use of controversial technology in closed door meetings, according to report

        Artificial intelligence and facial recognition used in a crowd
      • Tuesday, 11 April, 2023
        Anne Keast-Butler
        GCHQ gets first woman to lead UK spy agency

        Anne Keast-Butler to succeed Sir Jeremy Fleming, who will step down in May after six years

        Anne Keast-Butler, deputy of domestic intelligence agency MI5, will become the 17th leader of GCHQ
      • Monday, 30 January, 2023
        Tribunal finds ‘serious failings’ by UK security agency over privacy safeguards

        Judges rule shortcomings ‘ought to have been addressed urgently’ by MI5’s board and Home Office

        Thames House, headquarters of MI5
      • Monday, 28 February, 2022
        UK economy
        Surveillance risks ‘spinning out of control’, warns UK workers’ union

        About 60 per cent of employees report workplace monitoring as use of technology rises during pandemic

        A woman sits at a computer
      • Wednesday, 24 February, 2021
        Cyber warfare
        UK spy agency to use AI against cyber attacks and state actors

        GCHQ director says machine learning will help analysts deal with growing volumes of data

      • Monday, 27 April, 2020
        Cyber warfare
        UK intelligence urged to step up AI use to counter cyber threats

        Attacks can bypass human security and spread faster online, report warns

      • Tuesday, 10 March, 2020
        Special ReportEducation and Technology
        ‘Surveillance creep’ as cameras spread on campus

        Whether benign or intrusive, monitoring of students and teachers is commonplace in many schools

        High school hallway
      • Wednesday, 29 January, 2020
        FT MagazineGillian Tett
        Facial recognition: authoritarian intrusion or crime-fighting tool?

        Attitudes to state surveillance vary around the world, reflecting cultural and political norms

      • Thursday, 31 October, 2019
        UK watchdog calls for restraint in police use of facial recognition

        Technology should be used by law enforcement only when ‘strictly necessary’, says ICO

        An Avigilon CCTV camera is seen on a wall in King's Cross, London on August 16, 2019. - The Information Commissioner's Office announced it would launch its own investigation into the use of facial recognition cameras after it was revealed scanners were being used in the King's Cross area of London. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo credit should read TOLGA AKMEN/AFP/Getty Images)
      • Thursday, 5 September, 2019
        UK police in U-turn on King’s Cross facial recognition project

        Met and British Transport Police admit to sharing images for surveillance

        A surveillance camera is seen in the Kings Cross area in London, Britain, August 14, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
      • Wednesday, 4 September, 2019
        UK court backs Welsh police use of facial recognition technology

        Campaigners claimed human rights and data protection laws had been breached

        A live demonstration uses artificial intelligence and facial recognition in dense crowd spatial-temporal technology at the Horizon Robotics exhibit at the Las Vegas Convention Center during CES 2019 in Las Vegas on January 10, 2019. (Photo by DAVID MCNEW / AFP) (Photo credit should read DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images)
      • Monday, 17 June, 2019
        Britain’s ‘intrusive’ spying powers face fresh legal fight

        Campaigners say Investigatory Powers Act breaches European human rights

        File photo dated 06/08/13 of a someone using a laptop keyboard, as an investigation by the i newspaper found that a "tidal wave" of cyber crime is going unreported in Britain. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Saturday July 22, 2017. The number of cyber crimes rose almost 90% in the space of a year, a freedom of information request to UK police forces showed. See PA story CRIME Cyber. Photo credit should read: Dominic Lipinski/PA Wire
      • Tuesday, 21 May, 2019
        Facial recognition technology violates privacy, claims campaigner

        Legal challenge to police surveillance technique focuses on lack of safeguards

      • Thursday, 16 May, 2019
        Marietje Schaake
        Governments must halt the spread of commercial spyware

        Surveillance tools are for sale to whoever can afford them

        The Facebook Inc. WhatsApp application is displayed in the App Store on an Apple Inc. iPhone in an arranged photograph taken in Arlington, Virginia, U.S. on Monday, April 29, 2019. Facebook paid out a $123 million fine to EU antitrust regulators for failing to provide accurate information during their review of Facebook's WhatsApp takeover. Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg
      • Tuesday, 14 May, 2019
        MI5 probed over potential data compliance breaches

        UK Security Service at risk of breaking laws to protect public from unlawful surveillance

        MI5 SECURITY SERVICE BUILDING, MILLBANK, LONDON, ENGLAND, BRITAIN, UK
      • Monday, 22 April, 2019
        News in Focus16 min listen
        How our faces are helping create a new surveillance technology
      • Friday, 15 February, 2019
        Camilla Cavendish
        Returning Isis brides expose a woefully inadequate legal armoury

        Britain must face an uncomfortable reality: some acts that should be illegal are not

        Artwork for FTWeekend Comment - issue dated 16.02.19
      • Friday, 1 February, 2019
        Political espionage
        Foreign Office criticised over scrutiny of UK spy agencies

        Alleged failure to challenge MI6 and GCHQ over use of ‘James Bond clause’ alarms watchdog

        Undated handout file photo issued by GCHQ of the GCHQ building in Cheltenham. Britain's intelligence community has a "glaring lack" of ethnic minorities in senior positions, MPs have warned. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Wednesday July 18, 2018. Of all the UK security services only one, GCHQ, has any staff at senior civil service level who identify as black, Asian and minority ethnic (Bame), a report by the Parliamentary Intelligence and Security Committee found. See PA story POLITICS Intelligence. Photo credit should read: GCHQ/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
      • Thursday, 13 September, 2018
        Internet privacy
        UK’s digital spying agency broke European privacy laws, says court

        European Court of Human Rights rules against GCHQ over collection of online data

        Undated handout file photo issued by GCHQ of the GCHQ building in Cheltenham. Donald Trump's official spokesman has repeated claims that Barack Obama used GCHQ to spy on him before he became president. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Issue date: Friday March 17, 2017. But the claim was dismissed as "nonsense" by the UK eavesdropping agency in a highly unusual public statement. See PA story POLITICS Trump. Photo credit should read: GCHQ/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used in for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
      • Wednesday, 14 February, 2018
        Satellites5 min
        'We scan the whole world, every day'

        How fleets of tiny satellites are democratising surveillance from space

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