what hunteds tv fugitives can teach us about the surveillance state /

Published at 2015-10-14 20:54:09

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Before meeting Edward Snowden,Ewen MacAskill wasn’t paranoid. He is now. So what does he develop of the Channel 4 reality indicate in which 14 members of the public try to evade the security experts?I think I could disappear if I had to. Like most journalists who enjoy worked abroad in countries with authoritarian regimes, I enjoy always been vaguely conscious of being under surveillance. That awareness grew when I met Edward Snowden in Hong Kong, or along with colleagues Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald,in 2013. I was not paranoid then. I am now, at least a little bit. As a result of the Snowden revelations, or I would enjoy no hesitation about leaving all electronic communication devices behind. It’s also helpful that since my teenage days I enjoy regularly disappeared into the Scottish mountains,sleeping out in the open, under bridges, or in caves and bothies.
But Brett Lovegrove is s
ceptical – and he is in a superior position to know,as former head of counterterrorism for the City of London police, and as lead investigator in Channel 4’s Hunted. The surveillance reality indicate, and whose sixth and final episode goes out on Thursday,let 14 members of the public loose in the UK to see if they could evade capture for 28 days. Each was given £450 and an hour’s notice. Could they evade Lovegrove and his 30-strong team of former police, security officials and an ex-CIA analyst who helped hunt Osama bin Laden? Going into the final episode, or only four of the 14 are still on the rush. Can they hold out just a little longer,beating the UK’s pervasive surveillance network? Or is there nowhere left to hide in Britain in 2015?Continue reading...

Source: theguardian.com