Orwell to turn over in grave, BBC reports

BBC reporter Tom Heap is told off by the talking camera Not content to already bear the label of most endemically surveilled society in the European Union by Privacy International, the United Kingdom is turning its population surveillance efforts up a notch. The British government is spending $1 million to install closed-circuit televisions equipped with ...

Not content to already bear the label of most endemically surveilled society in the European Union by Privacy International, the United Kingdom is turning its population surveillance efforts up a notch. The British government is spending $1 million to install closed-circuit televisions equipped with loudspeakers through which observers will reprimand ill-behaved pedestrians. The BBC reports:

BBC reporter Tom Heap is told off by the talking camera
BBC reporter Tom Heap is told off by the talking camera

Not content to already bear the label of most endemically surveilled society in the European Union by Privacy International, the United Kingdom is turning its population surveillance efforts up a notch. The British government is spending $1 million to install closed-circuit televisions equipped with loudspeakers through which observers will reprimand ill-behaved pedestrians. The BBC reports:

‘Talking’ CCTV cameras that tell off people dropping litter or committing anti-social behaviour are to be extended to 20 areas across England. They are already used in Middlesbrough where people seen misbehaving can be told to stop via a loudspeaker, controlled by control centre staff.

The barking camera scheme coincides with Tony Blair’s “respect agenda,” which aims to crack down on anti-social behavior in UK cities. The government hopes that holding contests in schools across the UK to choose the voice of the cameras will ratchet up the excitement level, but some Britons are less than thrilled at the prospect of being shouted at for petty wrongdoing. As for concerns that the scheme may infringe on civil liberties, Home Secretary John Reid denied that the barking cameras constitute “secret surveillance”:

It’s very public, it’s interactive …. [T]he vast majority of people find that their life is more upset by people who make their life a misery in the inner cities because they can’t go out and feel safe and secure in a healthy, clean environment because of a minority of people.”

More from Foreign Policy

Vladimir Putin speaks during the Preliminary Draw of the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia at The Konstantin Palace on July 25, 2015 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.
Vladimir Putin speaks during the Preliminary Draw of the 2018 FIFA World Cup in Russia at The Konstantin Palace on July 25, 2015 in Saint Petersburg, Russia.

What Putin Got Right

The Russian president got many things wrong about invading Ukraine—but not everything.

Dmitry Medvedev (center in the group of officials), an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin who is now deputy chairman of the country's security council, visits the Omsktransmash (Omsk transport machine factory) in the southern Siberian city of Omsk.
Dmitry Medvedev (center in the group of officials), an ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin who is now deputy chairman of the country's security council, visits the Omsktransmash (Omsk transport machine factory) in the southern Siberian city of Omsk.

Russia Has Already Lost in the Long Run

Even if Moscow holds onto territory, the war has wrecked its future.

Sri Lankan construction workers along a road in Colombo.
Sri Lankan construction workers along a road in Colombo.

China’s Belt and Road to Nowhere

Xi Jinping’s signature foreign policy is a “shadow of its former self.”

Dalton speaks while sitting at a table alongside other U.S. officials.
Dalton speaks while sitting at a table alongside other U.S. officials.

The U.S. Overreacted to the Chinese Spy Balloon. That Scares Me.

So unused to being challenged, the United States has become so filled with anxiety over China that sober responses are becoming nearly impossible.