ANALYSE - Once upon a time, in a pre-9/11 world, the European Parliament was about to take the privacy rights of their citizens seriously. Now PRISM is only a problem for Europeans because our governments did not implement the policies they themselves proposed in July 2001.
On July 11th 2001 the European Parliament published a report on the Echelon spy network and the implications for European citizens and businesses. Speculations about the existence of this network of Great Britain-and-her-former-colonies had been going on for years but it took until 1999 for a journalist to publish a report that moved the subject out of the tinfoil-hat- zone. The report of the EU Parliament contains very practical and sensible proposals, but because of events two months later across the Atlantic, they have never been implemented. Or even discussed further.
Under the heading “Measures to encourage self-protection by citizens and enterprises” it lists several concrete proposals for improving data security and confidentiality of communications for EU citizens. The document calls on Parliament to inform citizens about the existence of Echelon and the implications for their privacy. This information must be ‘accompanied by practical assistance in designing and implementing comprehensive protection measures, including the security of information technology.’