Limiting use of drones restricts the techniques for surveillance, but not the process itself. Nothing under the plan stops gathering information in other ways
Limits are necessary for negative preparation and clash, and their interpretation makes the topic too big. Permitting limits on methods of surveillance, but not surveillance itself, permits the affirmative to avoid the issues of less surveillance and forces the negative to debate a huge number of different techniques
Constitution Committee 9 Constitution Committee, House of Lords, Parliament, UK 2009, Session 2008-09 Publications on the internet, Constitution Committee - Second Report, Surveillance: Citizens and the State Chapter 2 http://www.publications.parliament.uk/pa/ld200809/ldselect/ldconst/18/1804.htm
18. The term "surveillance" is used in different ways. A literal definition of surveillance as "watching over" indicates monitoring the behaviour of persons, objects, or systems. However surveillance is not only a visual process which involves looking at people and things. Surveillance can be undertaken in a wide range of ways involving a variety of technologies. The instruments of surveillance include closed-circuit television (CCTV), the interception of telecommunications ("wiretapping"), covert activities by human agents, heat-seeking and other sensing devices, body scans, technology for tracking movement, and many others.
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