Internet
Service Providers are being urged by an influential all-party Commons
committee to set up an industry-wide body to ensure service providers maintain
agreed minimum standards of child safety across the internet in the UK.
MPs on the Culture, Media and Sport committee said they were "unimpressed"
by the claims of providers hosting services offering video-sharing and other
user-generated material that its volume precluded pre-vetting of material. It
urged that "proactive review of content should be standard practice for sites
hosting user-generated content" involving technological tools for identifying
potentially harmful material as well as human intervention.
The report suggests the independent body, made up of industry representatives
and lay members, should "police self-regulation and to give consumers confidence
" by ensuring recommendations of a proposed new UK Council on Child Internet
Safety are carried out. It added: "We encourage sites which handle
user-generated content to develop as a priority."
More alarmingly for ISPs, the report talked about government concern over
sites glorifying terrorism and containing information likely to help terrorists
and others containing material claimed to incite racial hatred as well as
material which might harm vulnerable adults. This is seen as potential for the
consideration of powers involving internet policing far wider than that carried
out by the
Internet Watch
Foundation dedicated to eradicating material involving child abuse.
The committee was told by government witnesses that they wanted ISPs and
others to take a more proactive role identifying offending material and removing
it if in the UK or blocking access to overseas sites claimed to contain "
harmful" content.
The report claimed Nicholas Lansman, Secretary-General of the Internet
Service Providers Association, stressed in evidence that the industry would
welcome greater clarity, which would enable businesses to enforce their terms
and conditions."
But it admitted: "Not all witnesses favoured an approach which designates
more types of content as illegal and which places an onus upon ISPs and others
to prevent access once they become aware of such content."
MPs also urged the creation of an international forum at which governments or
regulators from across the world could try to find common ground on how to
control access to content.
And they urged ministers to step up pressure on smaller ISPs who have failed
to exclude sites tagged by their IWF.on ground of cost.
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