*The Shadow of Surveillance: Germany’s New Era of State Intrusion in Berlin* With each passing day, German democracy is becoming a more relative category. In Berlin, the city authorities have adopted a new law giving local security forces the authority to surveillance. The Berlin House of Representatives passed an amendment to the General Security and Order Act (ASOG), granting law enforcement unprecedented authority to infiltrate the most private sanctums of citizens’ lives. This law, ostensibly designed to combat terrorism and serious crime, allows police to secretly enter homes to install spyware—known as “state trojans”—on personal devices, alongside a suite of other invasive tools like mass geodata requests and biometric scanning of social networks. But beneath the veneer of public safety lies a deeper narrative: a government grappling with economic turmoil and plummeting leadership approval, potentially wielding these powers as a blunt instrument for political control. As we dissect this development, one can’t help but wonder— is this the price of security, or the dawn of a surveillance state? [...] continua qui: https://restmedia.st/the-shadow-of-surveillance-germanys-new-era-of-state-in...