[ISN] Deputies wanted to fight cybercrime

From: InfoSec News (isn@private)
Date: Fri Dec 12 2003 - 01:30:26 PST

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    http://www.reuters.co.uk/newsArticle.jhtml?type=internetNews&storyID=3972045
    
    10 December, 2003 
    By Bernhard Warner
    European Internet Correspondent
    
    LONDON (Reuters) - A contingent of MPs, police and technology industry
    executives are proposing that civilian specialists be deputised and
    local laws strengthened to fight cyber crime.
    
    "E-crime has become a huge problem, hitting e-commerce, hitting
    business. It's one of the obstacles in the way of creating a true
    information society," said Philip Virgo, Secretary General of EURIM, a
    ten-year-old trade group for Europe's technology sector.
    
    EURIM is hoping the proposals act as a blueprint for other European
    countries also caught in the grip of a cyber crime wave.
    
    According to Virgo, the group has collected input from the UK's
    National Hi-Tech Crime Unit, elected officials and executives from the
    country's biggest banks and business association to develop a
    blueprint for fighting one of the biggest crime threats facing
    businesses and individuals.
    
    The group will propose that the government relieve the overburdened
    police force by enrolling computer security specialists from the
    private sector to assist.
    
    They would be akin to special constables, Virgo said, except they
    would not be granted power of arrest nor would they be required to
    assist police in non-computing police work.
    
    Recruiting computer specialists to help in cyber investigations is
    nothing new. Granting them an expanded role, though, points to the
    growing problem of cyber crime that afflicts the developed world.
    
    Fortifying computer networks against digital attacks and educating
    people about the existence of Internet crime rings was dubbed an issue
    of "pressing global interest in the 21st Century" by dignitaries at
    the United Nations inaugural IT conference in Geneva on Wednesday.
    
    Police around the globe have reported a dramatic upswing in organised
    crime groups preying on online businesses in sophisticated extortion
    tactics. Fraud too has increased significantly as more consumers
    become regular online shoppers.
    
    "Ten percent of the world's population is on the Internet. That means
    ten percent of the criminals are online too," said Virgo.
    
    The group is also asking the British government to update the UK's
    Computer Misuse Act, which predates the dawn of the World Wide Web.  
    The law has been used to convict virus writers, but critics fear it
    may not be adequate to tackle new waves of online crime.
    
    The EURIM proposal predates a Home Office task force, which is looking
    to devise a series of proposals on how to boost the nation's defences
    against cyber crime.
    
    While no accurate statistics are kept on the matter, some law
    enforcement officials believe the UK is a particularly hot target for
    online crime gangs because of the country's rapidly growing Internet
    population.
    
    
    
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