The government launched its biggest ever internet safety campaign today in an
attempt to make e-commerce safer.
One of the leading lights behind the push is Secretary of the All Party
Parliamentary Internet Group and Nottinghamshire MP Dr Nick Palmer, one of the
few MPs with hands-on IT experience thanks to his previous career running a
multinational intranet.
He took the time to speak to
vnunet.com about the
challenges facing the public in an increasingly online society.
Why is the government choosing to act on internet safety at this
time?
The campaign is being launched around all internet use, not just
spyware
which I spoke on last week. There's a feeling that we
were behind the curve when it came to warning about viruses and worms and we
wanted to make sure that we were ahead of the curve this time round.
Will this campaign, and the larger fight to make the internet safer,
require new funding for forces like the
National High Tech Crime
Unit?
It's likely that the expansion of our activities will need some increase in
funding for the police investigating online crime. There's a need to be seen to
be better than the criminals and we need to move beyond the situation where some
feel we're moving a step behind the criminal element.
With spyware, how important is it to protect legitimate
operators?
We need to be clear about what is legitimate and what isn't. People who want
to operate on the right side of the law need to be supported. But we can't
tolerate those who operate outside the law.
Unfortunately those who operate legitimate spyware, code that lets people
know exactly what it's doing and why, will find they are less effective than
those who don't care about consumers, and illegal operators will fill the gap.
So we need to support the ethical and stop those who don't adhere to our
guidelines.
How well do you think IT issues are understood generally in
government?
The Civil Service is generally very good on IT issues. They have very good
specialists who understand the issues and practicalities. In parliament itself
there is less expertise.
Out of the 600 plus MPs in the House of Commons there's only a small number
who actually have direct IT experience, maybe as few as 20.
And what about the police?
To be frank it varies a lot. The specialist police services are really up to
speed on computer issues and have some of the best minds in the business. On
local forces it varies a lot but I don't think you can expect every bobby on the
beat to be a computer expert. That's one reason why you need expertise
centralised.
Do you agree?
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