"Nothing To Hide Nothing To Fear" sums it up nicely.
> Ms Berry is more specific. She says the additional access creates the prospect of a privacy campaigner's worst nightmare: a database filled with deeply personal data which can be searched by police whenever they want.
> "We do know that there have been police disciplined and expelled for stalking their ex-partners using data that the police hold," she says.
> "When there aren't proper internal controls, it really increases the risk of that kind of harm."
i.e. "If we give the police powers to solve/prevent crime, individual police officers may abuse those powers for their own nefarious and illegal purposes." Is this an argument against giving the police powers, or an argument for making sure that the powers are properly controlled? Because, obviously, we want the latter and don't want to scaremonger with the idea of the former ...