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This FTC Workshop Could Legitimize the Push for Online Digital ID Checks
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This FTC Workshop Could Legitimize the Push for Online Digital ID Checks

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. In January 2026, the Federal Trade Commission plans to gather a small army of “experts” in Washington to discuss a topic that sounds technical but reads like a blueprint for a new kind of internet. Officially, the event is about protecting children. Unofficially, it’s about identifying everyone. The FTC says the January 28 workshop at the Constitution Center will bring together researchers, policy officials, tech companies, and “consumer representatives” to explore the role of age verification and its relationship to the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act, or COPPA. It’s all about collecting and verifying age information, developing technical systems for estimation, and scaling those systems across digital environments. In government language, that means building tools that could determine who you are before you click anything. The FTC suggests this is about safeguarding minors. But once these systems exist, they rarely stop where they start. The design of a universal age-verification network could reach far beyond child safety, extending into how all users identify themselves across websites, platforms, and services. The agency’s agenda suggests a framework for what could become a credential-based web. If a website has to verify your age, it must verify you. And once verified, your information doesn’t evaporate after you log out. It’s stored somewhere, connected to something, waiting for the next access request. The federal effort comes after a wave of state-level enthusiasm for the same idea. Texas, Utah, Missouri, Virginia, and Ohio have each passed laws forcing websites to check the ages of users, often borrowing language directly from the European Union, Australia, and the United Kingdom. Those rules require identity documents, biometric scans, or certified third parties that act as digital hall monitors. In these states, “click to enter” has turned into “show your papers.” Many sites now require proof of age, while others test-drive digital ID programs linking personal credentials to online activity. The result is a slow creep toward a system where logging into a website looks a lot like crossing a border. This rush to verify everyone’s age destroys the privacy that once defined the web. If every click depends on presenting government-issued ID or biometric data, anonymity disappears. The internet begins to resemble a network of checkpoints, where access to information depends on identity verification. The bigger risk is the infrastructure built to hold it. Systems capable of verifying identities at scale are also systems capable of tracking behavior. Once governments or companies build massive databases of verified users, the temptation to use them for other purposes grows quickly. By organizing this workshop, the FTC signals it’s ready to explore embedding verification into the broader web ecosystem. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post This FTC Workshop Could Legitimize the Push for Online Digital ID Checks appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Berlin Approves New Expansion of Police Surveillance Powers
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Berlin Approves New Expansion of Police Surveillance Powers

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. Berlin’s regional parliament has passed a far-reaching overhaul of its “security” law, giving police new authority to conduct both digital and physical surveillance. The CDU-SPD coalition, supported by AfD votes, approved the reform of the General Security and Public Order Act (ASOG), changing the limits that once protected Berliners from intrusive policing. Interior Senator Iris Spranger (SPD) argued that the legislation modernizes police work for an era of encrypted communication, terrorism, and cybercrime. But it undermines core civil liberties and reshapes the relationship between citizens and the state. One of the most controversial elements is the expansion of police powers under paragraphs 26a and 26b. These allow investigators to hack into computers and smartphones under the banner of “source telecommunications surveillance” and “online searches.” Police may now install state-developed spyware, known as trojans, on personal devices to intercept messages before or after encryption. If the software cannot be deployed remotely, the law authorizes officers to secretly enter a person’s home to gain access. This enables police to install surveillance programs directly on hardware without the occupant’s knowledge. Berlin had previously resisted such practices, but now joins other federal states that permit physical entry to install digital monitoring tools. More: Germany Turns Its Back on Decades‑Old Privacy Protections with Sweeping Surveillance Bill IT security experts caution that maintaining hidden system vulnerabilities for state use exposes everyone to greater cyber risk. They also question the constitutional legitimacy of combining digital espionage with physical intrusion into private homes. The revised law also changes how police use body cameras. Paragraph 24c permits activation of bodycams inside private homes when officers believe there is a risk to life or limb. The government presents this as a measure for officer safety, but many view it as an open door to video surveillance within citizens’ most private settings. Paragraph 26e expands “cell tower queries,” allowing police to obtain data on every mobile phone connected to a specific tower during a chosen timeframe. This form of data collection can identify the movements of thousands of uninvolved individuals, including people who might simply have attended a protest. Under paragraph 24d, automatic license plate recognition systems will be used to record and cross-check vehicle plates with databases. Paragraph 24h also grants police the ability to neutralize or even take control of drones in certain situations. Paragraph 28a introduces biometric face and voice matching, using publicly available information from the internet. This gives Berlin’s police the ability to compare surveillance footage with images posted on social media platforms. This as a major step toward automated identification of individuals in public life. A further innovation, paragraph 42d, authorizes the use of real investigative data, such as photos, videos, and text messages, for “training and testing” artificial intelligence systems. This breaks the principle that data collected for one purpose cannot later be reused. Because AI models can reveal patterns from the original material, this clause risks turning police archives into training sets for machine learning systems. The law also lengthens preventive detention periods. Under paragraph 33, individuals may now be held for up to five days, or up to seven in terrorism-related cases. Lawmakers discussed this provision in connection with protests by the environmental group “Last Generation,” whose civil resistance actions have triggered repeated detentions. The group NoASOG denounced the law as an attack on civil society, while the Society for Civil Rights (GFF) announced plans to prepare a constitutional complaint. Berlin’s data protection commissioner, Meike Kamp, had already warned that approving the state trojan amounts to “a frontal attack on the IT security of all citizens.” She said the overall framework creates “a constitutionally highly questionable density of surveillance.” Berlin now joins the list of German states that have widened police authority in recent years, but the scope of this legislation stands out. It links physical home entry, digital interception, and artificial intelligence analysis under one legal structure, reducing the barriers between policing and private life. The range of new powers granted to police shifts the balance decisively toward state control of personal information. Berlin is a city once known for strong privacy traditions and the ASOG reform marks a decisive moment. Whether it withstands constitutional review will determine how far Germany’s commitment to individual privacy can bend in the name of security. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Berlin Approves New Expansion of Police Surveillance Powers appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

UK: MPs Clash Over the Digital ID That No One Asked For
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UK: MPs Clash Over the Digital ID That No One Asked For

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. A petition opposing the UK government’s proposed digital ID system, signed by nearly three million people, prompted a packed parliamentary debate in Westminster. MPs from across the British political spectrum voiced deep concerns that a national digital ID would endanger privacy, centralize state power, and shift Britain toward a surveillance-driven society. Keir Starmer entered Downing Street on a promise of stability and professionalism. Yet the direction of travel since then points to a government that treats civil liberties as expendable. Police have leaned on sweeping public order powers to detain people over “offensive” tweets, even as no one can define with confidence what “offensive” is from one political moment to the next. This has unfolded alongside the installation of mass facial recognition cameras in public spaces. The pattern is straightforward: widen surveillance, narrow dissent, and reassure the public that it is all necessary. Within that climate, digital ID was not an accidental addition to the political agenda. It has become Starmer’s organizing project, the missing component that ties together the broader expansion of state monitoring. A mandatory identity wallet, tied to work, renting, banking, and access to services, functions as the connective tissue in a system that already leans heavily on data collection and algorithmic judgment. Once that infrastructure exists, every adult becomes legible to the state in a way that no previous government has attempted. Yet, as was evidenced by this week’s hearing, the public and some lawmakers are pushing back against it. Robbie Moore (Conservative, Keighley and Ilkley) delivered one of the strongest rebukes to the policy, asking, “Who is actually in favor of these [digital ID] proposals, other than the Prime Minister?” He said the government was using “any excuse, however unjustified and unevidenced” to push its digital ID plans. Moore questioned the logic behind the scheme: “If the real target is people who are here illegally, why on earth do 67 million British citizens who already have national insurance numbers, passports, driving licences and birth certificates need to be dragged into a brand new compulsory database as well? What exactly is it about stopping the crisis of inflatable dinghies in the channel that requires your son, your daughter, your dad, or your 90-year-old grandma to hand over their data and facial geometry to the Home Office server?” Moore warned that digital ID hands the government “the key to our life” and that “once that digital infrastructure is set up, we cannot go back.” He said it “gives the state permanent control.” Drawing a comparison to China, he said, “Just look at the social credit system in China. Facial recognition linked to ID penalizes people. Blacklisted citizens cannot buy train or plane tickets, book hotels or apply for certain jobs. This Government have already indicated that migration work and renting will be tied to ID, but how long will it be before future Governments push further and accessing state services is brought under the control and monitoring of digital ID? We are already seeing signs of such a framework in the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill, the Online Safety Act 2023 and the One Login system. Combined with a formal digital ID, those frameworks would create a world of control for Whitehall and a soulless dystopia for the rest of us. Together, they replace the honesty and decency of human-to-human interaction with an opaque, mechanical ‘computer says no’ future. The scary truth is that control and ID cards hold an appeal for anyone who has access to power. It takes a conscious effort by every one of us to resist the temptation. Power does corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” He called the proposal “terrifying” and “a true honeypot for hackers all over the world,” pointing to Estonia’s 2021 breach in which “Estonia’s Government lost 280,000 digital ID photos.” He also referred to a One Login security incident where “cybersecurity specialists were able to infiltrate and potentially alter the underlying code without being noticed by the team working on the project.” Moore concluded, “Digital ID is an ever more intrusive evolution of traditional ID cards, one that promises to be more oppressive. Coupled with the powers of digital databases, increasing widespread facial recognition, digitalized public services and the looming prospect of a central bank’s digital currencies, digital ID threatens to create an all-encompassing digital surveillance state that even George Orwell’s ‘Nineteen Eighty Four’ could not predict. In every aspect of public life, we give over our data with consent. Yet digital ID turns that notion on its head, insisting that we hand over data to simply function in society, and potentially for reasons to which we cannot consent in advance.” He branded the digital ID scheme “a disaster waiting to happen.” Dame Chi Onwurah (Labour, Newcastle upon Tyne Central and West) said “the level of digital hygiene across Government is not such that it could support a mandatory digital ID scheme, in my view.” Dr. Neil Hudson (Conservative, Epping Forest) said the digital ID system “risks wasting billions on a complex, intrusive and potentially very insecure system that will not help anyone” and called for it to be scrapped. Greg Smith (Conservative, Mid Buckinghamshire) asked, “We have a Government who could not even keep their own Budget under wraps. What hope do they have with our personal data?” Cameron Thomas (Liberal Democrat, Tewkesbury) warned that the scheme “could put constituents’ most sensitive data into the hands of private, perhaps overseas, individuals who might have neither our constituents’ nor our country’s interests at heart.” Louie French (Conservative, Old Bexley and Sidcup) said the Labour Government was “trying to push through something that was not in their manifesto” and urged that “this House must therefore do all it can to stop it becoming a reality.” Jamie Stone (Liberal Democrat, Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross) remarked that the turnout for the debate was so high that there was “not enough space in this Chamber for everyone who has turned up.” Sarah Pochin (Reform UK, Runcorn and Helsby) said over 5,400 of her constituents had signed the petition against digital ID and that she had received many emails opposing it. She said her constituents understood that digital ID “will not solve the problem of illegal working in this country.” Rachael Maskell (Labour and Co operative, York Central) said digital ID “is about data, big, augmented data from different places and different sources, intersecting someone’s health records with their records in the Department for Work and Pensions, or Home Office records with HMRC or local government, about where we live, where we work and where we are.” She warned that it would allow a future government to “mix data together with facial recognition technology” and “run the algorithms” against it. She added that the current Labour government “would not dream of doing such a thing, but a future one might, indeed, a future one would.” Maskell cautioned that “of course there is interest in digital ID. We see the revolving door of those from the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change and people from his former office; there is Larry Ellison of Oracle; after all, he already has 185 contracts with the Government. He recognizes the power, the money and the opportunity, which is why we cannot afford to go there.” She pleaded with ministers to drop the plan, saying “this was not in the manifesto is enough to tell us all that it does not have public consent and therefore should not proceed.” Jeremy Corbyn (Independent, Islington North) argued that the debate should have been held in the main chamber given the level of public concern. He read from a constituent’s message: “digital ID is a deeply illiberal idea that threatens privacy, autonomy, and the open society” and “risks creating a two-tier Britain, where access to basic services, healthcare, housing, employment, even voting, depends on whether someone has the right app, paperwork, or digital trail.” Corbyn said, “ID cards are one thing; restricting jury trials is another. Facial recognition at tube stations and now even in supermarkets is something that people find deeply disturbing. Across the country there is a whole vein of thought where people are feeling a quite reasonable sense of paranoia about the levels of surveillance that they are under at the present time. Members of Parliament would do well to try to understand that. This attack on civil liberties, that is what it is, means that utterly vast amounts of information on all of us will be stored, as they are already in the health service. Unfortunately, the Government are now making that available to private healthcare interests at the same time. There is a huge issue here about our data, our information and our privacy, which we would do well to remember.” He added that digital ID is being pushed by those “who will make a great deal of money out of providing the necessary technical equipment to set up this surveillance system.” Sir Iain Duncan Smith (Conservative, Chingford and Woodford Green) cited a constituent who said digital ID reverses the presumption of innocence so that “almost everybody on an ID card is assumed to have guilt until they have discharged themselves as innocent.” Lee Anderson (Reform UK, Ashfield) warned that the government is trying to create a “Big Brother Britain” by “ramping up facial recognition, arresting people for social media posts, getting rid of jury trials in most cases, and trying to force digital ID on to us all.” Rebecca Long Bailey (Labour, Salford) rejected the claim that digital ID would curb illegal immigration, noting that “across Europe, nations with long standing ID card systems, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Belgium, Greece, have not seen reductions in irregular migration as a result of ID cards” and that “Estonia, the poster child for digital ID, actually has a bigger underground economy than Britain.” She said the government’s push “does not arrive in a vacuum” and “sits alongside a worrying pattern, the accelerated roll out of facial recognition, attempts to weaken end-to-end encryption, and data laws that strip away privacy protections.” Long Bailey warned that “Britain has no constitutional right to privacy,” meaning future governments could abuse the system and “we would have very little power to stop them.” She also noted that “UK Governments, of all stripes, do not have a good track record of keeping our data safe. The number of serious cyber incidents is rising year on year. Critical institutions from the British Library to the Legal Aid Agency to the One Login platform have already been criticized for major security flaws.” Rupert Lowe (Independent, Great Yarmouth) said, “Digital ID is the biggest step towards a surveillance state that this country has faced in my lifetime. If any Government want access to every detail of our lives, they are the ones who should be feared. We live in a country where the state cannot even run a basic IT system without losing data or leaking personal details. Digital ID will not last a week before a mountain of sensitive personal data is left at a bus stop in Kent again.” He added, “I do not trust any Government. I certainly do not trust this Government. Let us remember, once the Government get a new power, they never give it back. It expands and evolves. Digital ID will not stop at proving who we are. It will creep into travel, banking, housing, benefits and even voting. Today, it is voluntary; tomorrow, it will be required for security reasons. The day after that, we will not be able to access basic services without it, all for our own good, remember.” Lowe said that Britain “is supposed to be a country in which the Government serve the people, not the other way around. It is a country built on privacy, liberty, and trust. British people just want the Government to leave them alone and get out of their lives, to build a business, raise a family and live in peace. Digital ID treats every citizen as a suspect. It assumes that the state has the right to look over our shoulders. We defend against it by severely limiting the power of the state, not radically expanding it. Abolishing jury trials, cancelling elections, implementing facial recognition, and now this. This incoming dystopian future must be resisted.” He declared, “I will simply not comply. I will not be downloading a digital ID and I urge other MPs to commit to doing the same. The solution is obvious, I will just have to reinvest in a Nokia, I preferred the simplicity of that anyway. The sound people of Great Yarmouth do not want digital ID.” Brian Leishman (Labour, Alloa and Grangemouth) warned that digital ID creates the possibility of “some sort of dystopian future Government in power, one that looks to use technology for its own end.” A smaller group supported the proposal. Samantha Niblett (Labour, South Derbyshire) praised Estonia, Denmark, Belgium, Germany, and the Netherlands’ systems, saying, “If done well and offered for free, digital ID could make employment checks and even voting more accessible.” She acknowledged, however, that “roughly two thirds of responses from my constituents expressed serious concerns” but said this had been “intensified by fearmongering, some of which we have heard today from certain parliamentary colleagues.” Peter Prinsley (Labour, Bury St Edmunds and Stowmarket) said that opposition was “about the practicalities of how we implement digital ID, as opposed to the principle of whether we should have digital ID in the first place.” He said, “It is entirely possible for a great country like ours to modernize the way in which its citizens interact with the state while preserving civil liberties and privacy, and that is entirely the Government’s intention.” He added, “Nevertheless, I know some Members will think this is a slippery slope, but that, again, is a practical argument. It is up to us, as legislators and as a Government, to ensure that digital ID is implemented with safeguards against bureaucratic creep. But we should not forgo the incredible benefits of digital ID because of the hypothetical chance that something we are against, and that we can prevent, might happen.” Prinsley said the benefits “would be incredible.” Across the chamber, the sentiment remained overwhelmingly wary. MPs questioned whether a state that routinely mishandles data, outsources security, and expands surveillance powers can be trusted with a single system linking the personal records of every citizen. The mood in Westminster was clear, a free society cannot outsource liberty to a login. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post UK: MPs Clash Over the Digital ID That No One Asked For appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

Welsh Football Coach Still Banned from Sidelines After Acquittal in Free Speech Case Over Facebook Post
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Welsh Football Coach Still Banned from Sidelines After Acquittal in Free Speech Case Over Facebook Post

If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. If you had to guess a scenario that got a man kicked off the sidelines at a girls’ football match in Wales, you’d probably think of something involving a drink too many, a punch-up with the referee, or possibly an impromptu lecture on the offside rule that turned violent. What you probably wouldn’t guess is posting a Facebook video expressing anger after a triple child murder, followed by being found unanimously not guilty of inciting racial hatred. But that is precisely what happened to Jamie Michael, a 47-year-old Royal Marine veteran from Penygraig, Rhondda Valley. Until very recently, he coached his daughter’s football team, ran the local boys and girls club, and passed all the enhanced DBS checks required to be around children. Then one day, he made the mistake of saying something the government didn’t like. It started with the Southport stabbings. Three children murdered. Blood on the floor of a dance class. A country in shock. Jamie did what many people do in moments of horror: he went on Facebook and ranted. Criminal? According to the Crown, yes. According to twelve actual human beings with common sense on a jury, absolutely not. They took just 17 minutes to clear him. So, job done, right? Cleared by the courts. Innocent in the eyes of the law. Time to get back to normal life, coach some football, and cheer on his daughter. Wrong. Because while the court may have delivered a verdict, the Labour-run safeguarding board in his area had other ideas. And in true Kafkaesque style, they didn’t need a trial. Or evidence. Or, inconveniently, to have even watched the video that got him arrested in the first place. Instead, they met in secret, waved a wand, and poof: Jamie Michael, father of two, Iraq War veteran, community volunteer, is now “unsuitable” to be around children. Not because he harmed one. Not because he shouted at one. Not because he so much as looked at one sideways. But because someone said his political views were “radical.” Even though Jamie was officially banned from coaching, he was told he could still watch his daughter play. But his “behavior would be monitored.” “It’s a horrible feeling to have to tell people I am banned from coaching a girls’ football team,” Jamie said to the Telegraph. “What comes to people’s minds is that I must be a pervert or I’ve done something violent to children.” Now, let’s take a moment to appreciate the genius of the modern British bureaucracy. The Free Speech Union, which is now helping Jamie sue for £25,000 ($33K), says they’ve seen over a dozen similar cases: teachers, charity workers, volunteers. All are accused of having “extreme” or “patriotic” views. It’s as if patriotism itself has been shoved into the same filing cabinet as hate speech, next to “things that make Guardian columnists uncomfortable.” Lord Young of Acton, the FSU’s founder, calls it what it is: “a scandalous abuse of the system.” He’s right. Safeguarding protocols were meant to stop kids being abused, not to stage a political cleansing of the touchlines. The spectrum of acceptable opinion in Britain is getting narrower. And in Jamie’s case, the hammer dropped hard. Arrested at work, denied bail, thrown in jail for 17 days, and now effectively labeled a child risk. All this for a video that wasn’t even shown to the board that banned him. Oh, and let’s not forget. All of this was triggered by a Labour Party staffer who wrote in to complain that Jamie was a “disgrace.” The current Labour government is no fan of free speech. If you're tired of censorship and dystopian threats against civil liberties, subscribe to Reclaim The Net. The post Welsh Football Coach Still Banned from Sidelines After Acquittal in Free Speech Case Over Facebook Post appeared first on Reclaim The Net.

How Britain’s Political Elite Starved Independent Media Across The Atlantic
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How Britain’s Political Elite Starved Independent Media Across The Atlantic

For years, the group Stop Funding Fake News (SFFN) sold itself as a grassroots campaign against digital disinformation, a small band of concerned citizens defending democracy with polite emails to advertisers. The truth, revealed in journalist Paul Holden’s new book The Fraud: Keir Starmer, Morgan McSweeney and the Crisis of British Democracy, is far less tidy. Become a Member and Keep Reading… Reclaim your digital freedom. Get the latest on censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance, and learn how to fight back. Join Already a supporter? Sign In. (If you’re already logged in but still seeing this, refresh this page to show the post.) The post How Britain’s Political Elite Starved Independent Media Across The Atlantic appeared first on Reclaim The Net.