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The United Arab Emirates has pioneered the extensive use of surveillance technology to keep tabs on its own citizens. Data is being collected and also analysed on a massive and unprecedented scale, making people fear nothing they say or write is truly private. Then mine pinged too: it was an accident alert. Neither of us had signed up to this service. We kept a lookout, but the accident turned out to be on the opposite carriageway. But the other side of the coin is that everything is traced and collected.
The people I spoke to recognise that mass surveillance impinges on freedom of expression. Many preferred to discuss sensitive topics face-to-face rather than on the phone. Two academics agreed to meet me in Abu Dhabi, to talk about the history of surveillance in the UAE; they felt the same need to be discreet.
A helicopter circled overhead, as if to warn us we were being watched. Migrants from Southeast Asia are considered less dangerous, and find it easier to get visas. But the surveillance goes beyond keeping tabs on Islamist preachers and foreign workers. Because the government has majority holdings in telecoms operators Etisalat and Du formerly the Emirates Integrated Telecommunications Company , the security services are able to monitor all communications on their networks.
Probes and programs monitor both the content of non-digital communications and Internet traffic deep packet inspection gives access to metadata — who is communicating with whom, when, and what they are sending. They are intelligence partnerships that represent a long-term commitment for the countries involved. Soon after, one of the signatories, the engineer and human rights defender Ahmed Mansoor, and four other human rights defenders were arrested, sentenced to prison terms, then pardoned.