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I suspect you're right. Any ideas what they might be hiding?
I wonder if this comment from the Interception Commissioner's 2004 report is a clue:
Might the government be embarrassed at the number of self-authorised requests being made for communications data, which has been estimated to be over 1 million per year by FIPR?@ Ian - why would that result in the suppression of both the Interception of Communications and the Intelligence Services Commissioners' reports ?
Could the then Home Secretary Charles Clarke, have been overwhelmed by the number of Interception warrants he was supposed to read, carefully consider and then sign ?
Was there a significant number of interceptions which were not signed by Charles Clarke in the first instance ?
Is that what led to the amendment of the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act 2000 by the Terrorism">http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2006/60011--c.htm#32">Terrorism Act 2006 section 32 Interception warrants, which substitutes "by the hand of a senior official" rather than the "Secretary of State", for the renewal of interception warrants and certificated warrants ?
Could both of the Commissioners have said that there is still no need to implement RIPA Part III dealing with access to encrypted material and keys, which would have contradicted the idea of the RIPA Part III Code of Practice consultation exercise last summer ?
Perhaps it is something political, like the "Wilson Doctrine" regarding the interception of communication of Members of Parliament (Commons and Lords) ?
Anything directly to do with "national security" per se, could have be censored from the public versions of the reports, as allowed for under the RIPA legislation, and it would not then have been necessary to suppress the publication of the whole of these reports.
Could it just be that the lame duck Prime Minister Tony Blair can no longer be bothered to read long and complicated reports, and he is way behind on his nightly "red boxes" homework ?
The Independent reports today on what looks to be the 2006 Interceptions report:
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/crime/article1409395.ece
Scratch that, it's a 15 months report until March 2006.
Sir Swinton apparently approves of bugging MPs, so he's no great loss.
However, he did describe the 1,300% increase in warrants (or corresponding errors?) as "unacceptably high".
@ Dave - It was the number of errors which he described as unacceptably high.
The number of warrants and certificates (excluding the still secret ones for Northern Ireland) is actually less than in previous years. That says nothing about the actual number phone or email etc. intercepts, as one certificate for GCHQ could cover, say, all the internet traffic across the Atlantic.
His 2004 report was submitted to Tony Blair on 12th July 2005, and published on 3rd November 2005
His 2005-2006 report was submitted to Tony Blair on 19th December 2006, and published on 19th February 2007, but covers 1 January 2005 to 31 March 2006.
Section 58 of RIPA says:
Surely the way in which "calendar year" and "annual report" have mutated into "15 month report" published in the second calendar year cannot be what Parliament intended ?
Was Rt. Hon. Sir Swinton Thomas
"working to rule" ?
Technically, Tony Blair could have published the report on the 20th December 2006, the day that Parliament broke up for the Christmas and New Year recess.
Uh, please excuse my dodgy maths. It's actually a 13,000% increase in warrants.
Addressing your missed your last comment. I'm looking at the Annex to the reports, eg for 2004:
http://www.official-documents.gov.uk/document/hc0506/hc05/0549/0549.pdf
Warrants (a) in force, under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act, as at 31 December 2004 and (b) issued during the period 1 January 2004 and 31 December 2004
Home Secretary a) 674 b) 1849
Scottish Executive a) 34 b) 124
It also mentions RIPA modifications - are those amendments to existing warrants?
@ Dave - which figures are you using ? A warrant or certificate signed by the Home Secretary (or a senior official at the Home Office) is needed for intercepts of the content of phone calls or emails etc.
I recall that the total for one of the previous years came to 2600 warrants.
No warrant is needed for the
i.e. itemised phone bills, telephone subscriber name and address details, webserver or email server log files, mobile phone location based services data etc.
These requests only need an authorisation by, for example, a middle ranking Police officer like a Superintendent.
Thanks. Is "mobile phone location based services data" tracking you thru triangulating your mobile phone?
It would be very interesting to get figures on that.
@ Dave - the mobile networks sell a subset of the available tracking data to third party Location Based Services providers, who usually integrate it with a Geographical Information System or at least a web based map, and a not always very secure web based registration and credit card e-commerce setup, to sell these services to the public.
Some of the networks do have the facility for tringulation , e.g. Orange, who charge more for this more accurate service, some do not. Some keep a record of the last known location of a phone before it is switched off, even if it has not been used to make a call e.g. Vodafone, some do not.
There are all sorts of figure, even aggregate total figures, which would be of interest, and which would not betray any individual investigation, but which might show the increasing use or abuse of such techniques year on year, but which the public are being denied access.
Perhaps the new Interception of Communication Commissioner, the Rt. Hon. Sir Paul Kennedy or the mobile phone industry regulation authority Ofcom, will be more diligent in their public duty to provide as much transparency as possible.