Has Britain gone too far with digital surveillance?

From facial recognition vans to online speech laws, the UK is testing how far democracy can stretch in the digital age.

September 17, 2025 / 13:52 IST
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Has Britain gone too far with digital surveillance?
Has Britain gone too far with digital surveillance?

Police vans with live facial recognition cameras are now a common sight in the streets of London. The technology scans faces and matches them up against a list of 16,000 known wanted suspects in a database. Police say it has led to more than 1,000 arrests or citations so far since early 2024, including violent suspects. It can normalize constant surveillance, say critics, with innocent people stopped on the street and questioned, the New York Times reported.

The tradition of swapping security for privacy

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Britain has long been inclined towards the monitoring of safety. London already boasts one of the world's most intensive CCTV systems, and the 2016 Investigatory Powers Act gave police and spy agencies enormous powers to intercept internet communications. The new generation of technologies — from facial recognition to online regulation — builds on the foundation, fuelling new debates over just how much freedom can be curbed.

The Online Safety Act and online controls