Big Brother
التعريفات والمعاني
== English ==
=== Alternative forms ===
big brother
=== Etymology ===
After the nominal leader of Oceania in George Orwell's dystopian novel Nineteen Eighty-Four.
=== Noun ===
Big Brother (plural Big Brothers)
Unwarranted, invasive, and discreet surveillance, especially of a people by its government.
2002, Lorrie Faith Cranor, Web privacy with P3P, page 12
Some people are worried about marketing calls at dinnertime or junk mail or spam, while others are more concerned about Big Brother.
2008, Bertrand du Castel, Timothy M. Jurgensen Computer Theology, page 314
When one mentions the concepts of identity and governance in the same breath, a virtually autonomic response from many is the concern that a governmental big brother will soon be looking over their shoulders.
Any omnipresent authority or figurehead representing oppressive control.
Holonym: the System
Coordinate terms: the Man, Leviathan
1999, Rebecca A. Grant, Colin John Bennett, Visions of privacy: policy choices for the digital age, page 244
In the late 1960s and early 1970s, at the height of public concern over the emergence of a Big Brother society, privacy activism shared features in common with some of the hard-line environmental campaigns of the 1990s.
2003, Rodney Carlisle, Rodney P. Carlisle, Complete idiot's guide to spies and espionage, page 195
When the agencies of the federal government spied on the political activities of US citizens, they moved into the grey area between concern with national security and a Big Brother system that violated constitutional protections.
==== Derived terms ====
Big-Brotherish
Big Brotherism
==== Translations ====