Casting an eye on CCTV
It's a familiar story. Take any journey outside your home and your movements and your image will be recorded many times on CCTV.
The authorities claim cameras make society safer - helping solve crime and stop anti-social behaviour. In return, civil liberties groups claim but much to erode privacy.
It was generally with crime prevention in mind that in the UK but today it is employed in almost any way you can think of.
is currently investigating the across the UK.
This ubiquity is, of course, at the centre of the debate. Our acceptance of the presence of CCTV in our public spaces is the danger, say groups and . Others claim if you have nothing to hide then what's the problem?
However, now the battleground is changing. Campaigners' fears are no longer restricted to concerns over the monitoring of our physical movements, but about the monitoring of our online movements too. The blogging community is a powerful lobby to such an extent that - an organisation not know for making public comment - felt compelled recently to issue a it was creating a system to allow surveillance of all internet and telephone use in Britain.
Mention of GCHQ conjures up images of spying, eavesdropping and of course, the Cold War. It was in this climate in 1964 that Panorama looked at the issue as this abridged version shows.
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Today's heated debate over the use of cameras and other surveillance techniques in everyday life is not reflected back in 1964's programme, even though civilian use was mentioned. This is perhaps not surprising, given the limited availability of the very basic technology - and limited use - at the time.
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