Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born


Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born
La causa
Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born.
It started with payment processors.
Quiet restrictions, silent bans, frozen funds — all in the name of safety.
But it didn’t stop there.
Now they want your identity, your face, your voice, your location, your thoughts.
Around the world, governments are pushing laws and systems that normalize mass surveillance: biometric tracking, digital IDs, facial recognition, automated profiling, and predictive control.
It is being sold as “progress”, “security”, or “efficiency”. But it threatens our right to exist privately, to think freely, and to live without constant evaluation.
We are not against technology. We are against its use as a tool of control.
We ask world leaders, lawmakers, and international institutions to:
• Reject legislation that enables surveillance without consent.
• Oppose the forced implementation of digital ID systems.
• Protect the human right to privacy, anonymity, and autonomy.
• Regulate the use of personal data and biometric tracking.
We must act before surveillance becomes a default — before freedom becomes an illusion.
Say no now. Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born.
In Mexico, the Pegasus spyware scandal exposed how government agencies used commercial surveillance tools to illegally monitor journalists, activists, and citizens. Later, the same government’s system was hacked, exposing millions of biometric and personal records. Surveillance didn’t bring safety — it brought chaos and exploitation.
In India, mandatory biometric ID (Aadhaar) was linked to welfare, voting, and SIM cards. But data leaks and unauthorized access revealed just how vulnerable centralized ID systems really are.
In China, the Social Credit System already scores citizens based on behavior, purchases, opinions, and relationships. People are punished with travel bans, service denials, or public shaming — not by courts, but by algorithms.
In the EU and USA, laws are quietly expanding police and agency access to private data, while facial recognition and predictive algorithms spread across airports, cities, and even schools.
These systems are spreading globally — and many democracies are adopting them without debate.
The future is being built now, quietly, piece by piece.
We still have a chance to speak.
We still have a choice.
1
La causa
Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born.
It started with payment processors.
Quiet restrictions, silent bans, frozen funds — all in the name of safety.
But it didn’t stop there.
Now they want your identity, your face, your voice, your location, your thoughts.
Around the world, governments are pushing laws and systems that normalize mass surveillance: biometric tracking, digital IDs, facial recognition, automated profiling, and predictive control.
It is being sold as “progress”, “security”, or “efficiency”. But it threatens our right to exist privately, to think freely, and to live without constant evaluation.
We are not against technology. We are against its use as a tool of control.
We ask world leaders, lawmakers, and international institutions to:
• Reject legislation that enables surveillance without consent.
• Oppose the forced implementation of digital ID systems.
• Protect the human right to privacy, anonymity, and autonomy.
• Regulate the use of personal data and biometric tracking.
We must act before surveillance becomes a default — before freedom becomes an illusion.
Say no now. Let’s stop Big Brother before he is born.
In Mexico, the Pegasus spyware scandal exposed how government agencies used commercial surveillance tools to illegally monitor journalists, activists, and citizens. Later, the same government’s system was hacked, exposing millions of biometric and personal records. Surveillance didn’t bring safety — it brought chaos and exploitation.
In India, mandatory biometric ID (Aadhaar) was linked to welfare, voting, and SIM cards. But data leaks and unauthorized access revealed just how vulnerable centralized ID systems really are.
In China, the Social Credit System already scores citizens based on behavior, purchases, opinions, and relationships. People are punished with travel bans, service denials, or public shaming — not by courts, but by algorithms.
In the EU and USA, laws are quietly expanding police and agency access to private data, while facial recognition and predictive algorithms spread across airports, cities, and even schools.
These systems are spreading globally — and many democracies are adopting them without debate.
The future is being built now, quietly, piece by piece.
We still have a chance to speak.
We still have a choice.
1
Petición creada en 30 de julio de 2025