The House of Lords has renewed calls on the government to act on several
recommendations made in its
Personal
Internet Security report (PDF), including new data breach notification laws
and a 'kitemark' scheme to rate secure internet services.
Lord Broers, chairman of the Science and Technology Committee, said during a
debate to discuss recommendations made in the
2007
report and its
follow-up
this year, that the Lords were gratified that the government had softened
its stance in some areas.
However, he pointed to several aspects which have yet to be acted on,
including compelling banks to refund customers who fall victim to internet
fraud, and setting up a cross-departmental group of industry and academic
experts to classify different types of electronic crime.
"Why is the government resisting? Do they think they can do this themselves?
" asked Lord Broers during his opening remarks.
"We also recommended data breach notification laws. The government seems
eager to admit its losses, but this is not the case for banks and industry."
Lord Broers also said that the government had resisted a BSI kitemark scheme
to help differentiate internet services according to their levels of security.
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