Showing posts with label Politics UK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Politics UK. Show all posts

Friday, July 18, 2008

Channel 4 News animated political cartoon - Dark nights need superheroes


Who can save the national economy? Click the picture for the animated political cartoon at Channel 4 News or, go here.

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Channel 4 News animated political cartoon - The price of oil


The rising price of crude oil is connected to a lack of global refinery capacity, changing demand and good old traditional geopolitics. Why would a group of countries want to make their major economic asset cheaper, just to us please our domestic users?
Click the picture, or go straight to Channel 4 from here, for the animated cartoon.
Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Tuesday, May 27, 2008

The construction of David Cameron


Not all construction in the UK has halted in the difficult time/slowdown/crisis/recession (delete as appropriate.)

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Friday, May 23, 2008

Crewe and Nantwich-ed


A predictably ugly result for Gordon Brown in the Crewe and Nantwich by-election. How he must enjoy being top man in the presidential style of politics which has been fashionable since late era Mrs Thatcher. (Apologies for the repost but it seems about where things are.)

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Channel 4 News animated political cartoon - the reclassification of cannabis


Click the picture for animated political cartoon on the reclassification of cannabis for Channel 4 News, or go here.

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

Gordon Brown goes to the circus - Hack cartoon


When bread gets expensive, any leader will find themselves in a fight.

Hack cartoons

Thursday, January 24, 2008

Peter Hain-Political blogging's first victim?

There's an interesting response to the end of Peter Hain's ministerial career from Mick Fealty at the Telegraph’s Brassneck blog. He praises the work undertaken by Guido Fawkes's diary, which is run by Paul Delaire Staines.

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Saturday, January 12, 2008

Peter Hain donations cartoon

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The forgetful Peter Hain featured in this animation about Labour's dubious donations which I made for Channel 4 back in November 2007. Peter is the orange one.
12 January 2008

UPDATED: 15th January 2008
There's a good short analysis of how untransparent Mr Hain's financial arrangements were here



Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Friday, November 23, 2007

The politics of identity news and missing CDs


The following is a long blog for me, but then, I didn't write it. It was published in The Health Service Journal in September of this year. The article is about identity management, and in view of this week's news (see blogs past and drawings above), I would urge anyone who is passing by (hello) to read it. I have an interest to declare at the end too.*

For your information, the information commissioner’s website is at: www.ico.gov.uk

The speed at which businesses, the government and the public sector are developing electronic record systems is starting to gather pace.

The arguments in favour of new systems are, by now, well rehearsed. They include the idea that electronic records will support safer services, increase efficiency, promote team working and deliver more security, accessibility and convenience for end users – patients, in the case of the NHS.

However, the Information Commissioner’s latest Annual Report suggests that many organisations are finding some of these kinds of argument more compelling than others.

Taken as a whole, it suggests that while many bodies are happy to embrace the increased information sharing, surveillance and targeting that new systems make possible, they are less committed to security and positively ambivalent about openness.

Sadly, I fear that the NHS is following the general trend. It is undoubtedly in the vanguard of what an earlier IC report called the Surveillance Society - defined as a world in which technology is routinely used to track and record people’s activities.

This is not only because it is developing its own care records. It is also because its data tends to be drawn into other projects, such as the children’s database, and because it is enthusiastic about using electronic systems to target services on people and monitor their impact (the algorithm to spot patients at ‘high risk’ of hospital admission is a case in point).

The problem is that there are few opportunities to debate what such systems can legitimately be used for - and even fewer checks on function creep. As Richard Thomas, the IC, notes: ‘The benefits of using personal information are undeniable.

‘But so are the risks for individuals and society where use goes beyond reasonable expectations or where things go wrong. [And] the risks - such as mistaken identity, judgemental profiling - magnify as information is shared ever wider.’

Sooner or later, it is certain, the NHS will be caught up in a major scandal involving records, databases or targeting. Some of its data will turn up somewhere it shouldn’t. Supposedly neutral targeting will turn out to be discriminatory. Some deserving soul will not get the treatment they need because ‘the computer says no.’

And when that happens, questions will be asked about how such systems could have been put in place and there will be reviews and resignations… which is why Mr Thomas argues that the best defences we now have against such abuses are data protection and the self interest of organisations with reputations to lose.

Unfortunately, other parts of his Annual Report suggest that these are not much of a defence, since it covers some ‘frankly horrifying’ but very basic security breaches - data being used on unsecured laptops, left open on an applicant website and dumped in bin bags.

Only one of these incidents is related to the NHS (guess which). But since every NHS IT manager has a fund of stories about staff taping passwords to computers or carrying patient notes around on USB sticks and MP3 players, any of them could be.

These kinds of breaches, and the social engineering lapses covered in another report on The Illegal Trade in Personal Information, happen despite the reputational damage that inevitably occurs when news of them gets out.

They also suggest that the potential for electronic records to deliver better security is not being realised in practice, because the introduction of new systems is not being accompanied by a new culture of security and confidentiality in using them.

Nevertheless, organisations are still willing to plead confidentiality when their own interests are at stake. The Annual Report contains the usual list of bodies - including an NHS trust - that were only too willing to hang on to information that should have been released under freedom of information rules.

Unusually, the IC addresses ‘ministers, permanent secretaries, chairs and chief executives’ directly in the year’s report. It is they, he argues, who must ensure that their organisations ‘exercise the necessary self restraint’ as they help to create a surveillance society and who must ‘ensure that their organisations guarantee safeguards.’

This is an important message, but at the moment I’d say we are in for years of stories about database application and security scandals. As a journalist, I suppose I shouldn’t complain, since they’ll keep me in business.

Managers, though, might like to reflect on Mr Thomas’ point that it won’t be much fun to be caught up in them, and take steps that will leave me and my colleagues writing about something else.

These are the reasons I have great caution about the uses of technology, commercially and publically. It is rarely the technology itself which is the issue, the real problem is invariably the people who use it, us.

* The article was written by my partner, Lyn Whitfield.
23rd November 2007


Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Channel 4 News-animated political cartoon

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Cash for honours - we discover how much co-operation John Yates and the Met Police received from the very prominent people who were under investigation for the sale of national honours and titles. Published above and here. 24th October 2007
Matt Buck’s animated drawings


UPDATE: Tom Bower has a review on The Guardian today which gives an overview of the whole affair and its key players.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Problems with making jokes

A sweet spot from D-Notice

Matt Buck’s animated drawings

Thursday, October 11, 2007

Gordon Brown Prime Minister - political cartoon news


It's been an awful week for the Prime Minister, as I hope you can see here.
10th October 2007
Hack animated drawings

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Channel 4 News animation: David Cameron-Reduced

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David Cameron's speech to the Conservative Party Conference on 3rd October 2007 - somewhat reduced. Published here and by Channel 4 News. You can watch Gordon Brown's effort in Bournemouth and Ming Campbell in Brighton here.

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Cartoonists for Boris Johnson! News

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Boris Johnson has been adopted as the official Conservative candidate for the next London mayoral election. Taking the liberty of speaking for my professional colleagues, I think I can say, we are all delighted - a walking caricature does make life easier.

UPDATE:
There’s a fascinating little piece of first-hand knowledge about Boris and one of his contemporaries here, courtesy of Adrian Monck.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Political news


'Tis the season for seaside drawings and laughing at Ming Campbell. Image drawn for the Local Government Association.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Party political conference news


It is a busy time of year for political cartoonists and a lot of old rhetoric is about to get recycled. A commissioned drawing for the Local Government Association.

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Bouncing Brown


A new political magazine cover image. Of course, a lot of these things actually missed their targets...but it only took one.

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Animated political cartoon news

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This new political animation is published here.

My colleague, Morten, also has some more interesting news on developments in America.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Supercasino news

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Gordon Brown's highly trailed use of cabinet government appears highly selective already - Britain's first supercasino in Manchester is apparently doomed.