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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Aisha Gani

Edward Snowden attacks UK government over investigatory powers bill

Edward Snowden tweeted criticism of Theresa May’s measures
Edward Snowden tweeted criticism of Theresa May’s measures Composite: Reuters/Reuters

Edward Snowden has outlined his opposition to the British government’s investigatory powers bill, arguing that Conservative politicians were “taking notes on how to defend the indefensible”.

The former National Security Agency (NSA) whistleblower, whose disclosure of top-secret documents ultimately led to the home secretary, Theresa May, proposing the bill, made a series of tweets on Wednesday warning that the communications data covered by the legislation was “the activity log of your life”.


He retweeted a post that laid bare how bulk interception warrants, section 106 of the bill, would allow GCHQ to get mass warrants for any communication content types and metadata, or activity records.

Snowden also attacked the changes to the bill which include a two-stage approvals process that would allow the home secretary to give the initial authorisation to intercept warrants, followed by confirmation from a senior judge with security clearance.

#SnoopersCharter’s ‘judicial oversight’ seems notional, not serious. Judges need power to weigh evidence, propriety,” he tweeted.

The former CIA employee, who is now director Freedom of the Press Foundation, a crowdfunded journalism initiative, dismissed the argument used by some ministers that web records were similar to an itemised phone bill and said storing internet connection records (ICR) was akin to “a list of every book you’ve ever opened”.

The publication of the draft bill comes two and a half years after Snowden disclosed the scale of secret mass surveillance of the global traffic in confidential personal data carried out by Britain’s GCHQ and the NSA in the US.

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