U.K. launches first Internet Governance Forum
By Leo King
,
Computerworld
, 03/08/2008
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The U.K. Internet Governance Forum (IGF) was held at the Houses of Parliament on Thursday, with representatives from Nominet,
the Specialist Crime Directorate, MPs and a British ambassador.
IGF will share information between law enforcement, ISPs and charities for victims of abuse online, in order to discuss strategies
to tackle online crime.
The U.K. is the first nation to have set up its own forum on internet governance. It will work with the IGF international
forum the IGF international forum, which was established in 2006 by the United Nations to give companies, governments, organizations
and individuals the opportunity to debate how the internet is changing and developing. The U.K. played a major part in its
creation.
The forum is independent of the government, even though it involves collaboration from public sector figures including individual
MPs. Representatives from parliament, charities such as Amnesty International and the internet industry are involved in the
IGF.
Alun Michael MP, who is a chair at the forum and played a key role in setting up the U.K. IGF, told Computerworld U.K. that
it was a crucial step in internet governance nationally, allowing Britain to take steps relevant to its culture in tackling
the problem.
"It's important to have our own forum and to take ownership of issues in the U.K. rather than following others," he said.
Waiting for the government to legislate would have meant the process was "haphazard, as is anything at parliament level".
"'Let's do it first' was our thinking, so it's not necessary for the government to legislate," said Michael. "We have to make
the IGF work, otherwise we'll end up with a bureaucratic straightjacket."
Initial projects will include mapping the principal partners of the U.K. IGF and deciding how they will work best together.
In December, the next annual international IGF event will be held in Delhi, and the winners of a new best practice challenge,
launched by national domain name registry Nominet as part of the initiative, will take a leading role at the preparatory meeting
for British delegates going to the forum.
Detective superintendent Charlie McMurdie, Scotland Yard's head of e-crime, reiterated calls for a specialist online crime
unit. "Internet crime does not sit comfortably around current policing," she said. "We need somewhere to set standards on
how we report crime and coordinate our response, and how we share information."
Markus Kummer, executive coordinator at the international IGF, said that in setting up a national forum, the U.K. was a "shining
example" of internet governance.
For more enterprise computing news, visit Computerworld. Story copyright Computerworld, Inc.
Comments (1)
This Internet Governance Forum will be great if applied ...By Anonymous on March 30, 2008, 12:54 pmThis Internet Governance Forum will be great if applied not only in UK but the whole europe so each region can automatically access. _________________________ Rasya.Pazka A...
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