Internet
companies, retailers, and the government must do far more to protect people
from the dangers of the "lawless Wild West" of cyberspace, an
influential group of British Members of Parliament said Friday.
In
a critical report, the MPs said the government and industry have a
"laissez-faire" approach to online crime that could lead to an
"economically disastrous" loss of public confidence in the Internet.
With
computer fraud growing more sophisticated, people have little hope of
protecting themselves alone, the House of Lords' Science and Technology
Committee said.
"You
can't just rely on individuals to take responsibility for their own security,"
said committee Chairman Lord Broers. "They will always be outfoxed by the
bad guys."
Cybercrime
is one of the fastest growing criminal activities, not just in Britain, and
includes a huge range of illegal activity including financial scams, computer
hacking, downloading pornographic images, virus attacks, stalking by e-mail,
and creating web sites that promote racial hatred.
The
lawmakers said that industry—from software makers and Internet service providers
to banks and shops—must do far more to protect customers.
And
they criticized the government for insisting that responsibility for security
rests with Internet users, who are often faced with a "bewildering"
set of options.
"This
is no longer realistic, and compounds the perception that the Internet is a
lawless 'Wild West,'" the report said.
The
government must work with the European Union to see if more responsibility for
security could be legally handed to computer and software makers, the report
said.
A
network of police computer laboratories should be set up to fight the
"flourishing" online crime industry.
Senior
police must get the extra funds needed to launch a central e-crime unit and a
Web site where people could report online offences.
The
report also highlighted the lack of clear figures on e-crime and said the
government should make sure the courts are aware of the seriousness of the
problem.
"The
choice is either to intervene now... to keep the threat to the Internet under
control, or to let it grow unchecked, and risk an economically disastrous,
long-term loss of public confidence in the Internet," the report
concluded.
Copyright 2007 Reuters.