Leading security experts have started an
online
petition on the
10
Downing Street website calling for the establishment of a police division
devoted exclusively to electronic crime.
Other signatories include Andrew Yeomans, vice president of global
information security at investment bank
Dresdner
Kleinwort, and Martyn Thomas, professor of software engineering at the
University
of Oxford.
"We the undersigned petition the Prime Minister to give urgent priority to
the formation of a police central e-crime unit, as proposed by the
Metropolitan
Police and the
Association
of Chief Police Officers," reads the petition.
"The operation should cover all the activities proposed by the Metropolitan
Police to the
Home
Office for such a unit, beginning with the collation of incident
notification and intelligence and support for, and co-operation with,
organisations like
Get
Safe OnLine and the
National
E-Crime Prevention Centre.
"But it needs to be on a scale akin to similar operations in the US with
additional funding and resources from other government departments and industry
(i.e. not just existing police budgets)."
Signatories also include Philip Virgo, director general of the
Eurim
parliament-industry IT group, and Simon Moores of the
Conservative
Technology Forum.
Britain was one of the first countries to set up an electronic crime division
with the formation of the National High Tech Crime Unit in 2001, and the
approach has been copied by many other countries.
But the Unit was shut down in 2006 and most of its responsibilities and staff
were absorbed into the
Serious
Organised Crime Agency.
The Agency had a good
first year, with a 94 per cent conviction rate, but many feel believe that a
dedicated team is needed to fight the latest threats.
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