Parliamentarians, business leaders and other internet stakeholders met today
at a UK Internet Governance Forum event in London to consider the most
appropriate mechanisms for safeguarding the web.
The UK IGF was conceived last year as a means of bringing together industry,
government, parliament and civil society in order to share ideas and formulate
examples of UK best practice in online governance, ahead of the international
Internet Governance Forum in Hyderabad
in December.
At the UK IGF, stakeholders discussed issues including security,
accessibility, online crime reduction and diversity. Chair, Alun Michael MP
argued that governments can't legislate for internet-related issues because of
the rapid rate of change, and instead should look to national fora like the UK
IGF to take a multi-stakeholder, collaborative and consensual approach to
internet governance.
"People started off by saying 'the internet is too fast, too global, too
universal and too technical; let's leave it to someone else'," he explained. "
But the fact is if you leave it to someone else the chances are that it'll go
wrong and the bad guys will take over … leaving it to the institutions doesn't
work either."
At the event .uk registry Nominet
confirmed the winners of its Best Practice Awards which will be showwcased in
Hyderabad as examples of the most innovative UK responses to various
internet-related challenges.
Awareness campaign Get Safe Online
won the Personal Safety Online category, while Barclays was judged to have the
Best Security Initiative, with its PINsentry two-factor authenticaton device.
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