Level: advanced
Big Brother is Watching You
Introduction
The idea of Big Brother comes from a book called "1984" written by the English author
George Orwell in 1948. The book describes a society where the government collects information about
what everyone is doing and saying, and where people are continually anxious that they may be
arrested by the Thought Police for saying something that the government doesn't agree with. If there is one person who's controlling this, his real identity is kept secret. People are only told that he is their Big Brother.
When people discuss the latest forms of surveillance (i.e. the techniques used to monitor what
people do and say) it is very common to refer back to this figure of Big Brother. Let’s begin
by looking at a way of using mobile phones to keep teenagers under surveillance.
Reading
Big Daddy
Harold is the father of a teenage daughter who likes to go out for a milkshake
with her friends from time to time. They live in a densely populated urban area. Last week he heard
that a boy had been stabbed in a park opposite his school. Stories like that leave him feeling more
than a little anxious about how safe his daughter is on the city streets without an adult to take
care of her.
He decides to subscribe to a mobile phone tracking service. His daughter always
carries her mobile phone with her wherever she goes, so it seems sensible to pay the small monthly
subscription to a company which will track his daughter’s phone. Then, whenever she is out of
the house, he can see a map on his computer screen which will indicate where in the city his
daughter is. For a small extra fee he can let the tracking company know where he definitely
doesn’t want his daughter to go and the system will automatically alert him on his mobile
phone as soon as his daughter enters one of the no-go areas.
One of these tracking companies, called “Trace A Mobile”, claims that
two thirds of British parents are interested in using a mobile phone tracking service. Their survey
of 2,160 parents also revealed that safety-conscious parents are buying mobile phones for children
as young as four. Fears about safety have left UK parents desperate to keep tabs on their kids.
The managing director of the company acknowledges that parents will find
themselves faced with a dilemma, “On the one hand they don’t want to be seen to be
continually checking up on their kids, but on the other they want to keep an eye on their kids so
that they know they are safe."
Vocabulary
- If the police are watching you, we often say that they are keeping you under surveillance. Can
you find four words or phrases in the passage that mean “keep someone under
surveillance” or “find out where someone is”?
- Find the word subscribe in the first paragraph. Usually we say that you subscribe to a
magazine. What does this mean?
- We say that you are in a dilemma or faced with a dilemma. What does this mean?
- What is meant at the end of the second paragraph when it says that the company alerts the
father?
Over to you
- If you were Harold's daughter, how would you feel about having your movements tracked
outside the house?
- Is it just a question of safety or are there other values involved when parents like Harold
start to use surveillance techniques like this?
- Clearly Harold is worried about the safety of his daughter. What advice would you give
him?
Privacy
When people debate the pros and cons of the latest surveillance techniques it doesn’t take
long for someone to raise the issue of privacy. Don’t we have a right to privacy? Don’t
some of these new surveillance techniques infringe our right to privacy? To find out what our
rights are we need to look at what the law says. Let’s read what Article 8 of the European
Charter of Human Rights has to say.
(1). Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life, his home
and his correspondence.
(2). There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right unless it
is in the interests of national security, public safety, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the economic well-being of the country, for the protection of health or morals, or for the
protection of the rights and freedoms of others.
Questions
- Article 8 refers specifically to respecting a person's correspondence. In practice, if a
government is to uphold this principle, what do you think it should not do?
- According to the charter, under what circumstances can the principle of respect for privacy be
overridden? (Note: if something overrides a principle, the principle is given less priority than
the overriding consideration.)
- Young people or students who don't have to share a bedroom might say they are glad to have
a room to themselves because they value their privacy. We also talk in English about people
invading our privacy. To help you clarify just what privacy is, try to describe a few things that
you think would constitute an invasion of privacy.
- How much importance do you think we should give to the value of privacy? Some people imply that
it is insignificant. They argue that we only have a reason to complain about the latest
surveillance techniques if we have something to hide. This implies that if we were good citizens we
would have nothing to hide, and if we had nothing to hide we should have no objection to any form
of surveillance. Does that sound reasonable?
Language practice
Transform the following sentences using the word in bold. Do not change the form of that
word.
- The police are watching me all the time. surveillance
The police are ............................................................................. 24
hours a day.
- When parents hear stories of stabbings they feel anxious. leave
Stories of stabbings .............................................................................
anxious.
- The company will find out where the girl is. trace
The company will ................................................. location.
- They will let you know if she enters one of the no-go areas. alerted
You ............................................. if she enters one of the no-go areas.
- I want to know where my kids are. eye
I want to ................................................. my kids.
- Those in authority should respect our right to privacy. infringe
Those in authority should .......................................... our right to privacy.
- We are doing this for the benefit of the country's economy. well-being
We are doing this ............................................................................ the
country.
- The value of public safety is more important than that of privacy. overriden
The value of privacy ........................................................................ of
public safety.
- I would say these new measures invade our privacy. constitute
I would say these new measures .................................................. privacy.
- I don't mind having my movements monitored by the police. objection
I ............................................................ police monitoring my movements.
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