Police will keep driving records for five years Police plan to map all journeys made by drivers on major roads and store the data for five years.
A national network of roadside cameras will be able to read 50 million number plates each day enabling officers to reconstruct the movements of motorists.
But civil rights campaigners have questioned why the data needs to be kept for so long and want reassurances on who will be allowed to access the information.
The project relies on automatic number plate recognition (ANPR) cameras which pinpoint the time and location of all vehicles on the road.
Police originally said they only wanted the information for two years but were forced to admit the five year plan following a Freedom of Information Act inquiry.
It revealed the database will be able to store as many as 18 billion license plates by 2009.
Thousands of CCTV cameras have been converted to read ANPR data while mobile cameras have been installed in patrol cars and unmarked vehicles at the sides of roads.
Even police helicopters are equipped with the new equipment.
The director of Privacy International last night said the five year record was "unnecessary and disproportionate" and has lodged a complaint with the Information Commissioners Office.
Simon Davies from Privacy International said the database would give police "extraordinary powers of surveillance."
The Association of Chief Police Officers said all forces, bar two, would be linked to the database by the end of the year.
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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/motoring/main.jhtml?xml=/motoring/2008/09/15/mdata115.xml
Bulldog- 09-15-2008
The police are claiming that this will enable them to crack down on serious crime.
This story illustrates just what sort of crack down on serious crime we can expect.
Sandman- 09-15-2008
So, they'll know where we drive to, who we make phone calls to, who we send emails to, etc. They also want our DNA and fingerprints, and we all have to prove we are innocent or be presumed guilty.
Nice country this is becoming.
Send me back to Afghanistan. At least there we know who the enemy is (even if we don't know why).
Bulldog- 09-15-2008
Nice country this is becoming.
I concur.
:(
Paul- 09-30-2008
This Country is on a fast Track to becoming a Police state; Trying to keep a "Low Profile" is getting harder and harder; I'm thinking of going abroad again all ready; and Ive only recently just come back to the UK !.
Paul
Bulldog- 09-30-2008
I'm thinking of going abroad again all ready; and Ive only recently just come back to the UK
How did you find the natives in Spain Paul?
Did they treat you with the same respect that you extend to foreigners here?
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