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Reign of e-commerce declared
Peter Mandleson wants Britain leading the electronic age
By Internet Correspondent Chris Nuttall
The British government says it aims to make the UK the best place in the world to trade online through its Electronic Commerce Bill, announced in the Queen's speech.
"We need to make sure that all our laws and rules are e-commerce friendly," he said.
Controversial encryption proposals But the legislation promises to be controversial, with Internet civil liberties groups concerned at plans to allow the police access to private electronic communications if they suspect criminal activity.
"Whether we are concerned with the integrity of information (ensuring its content has not been altered) or its confidentiality (keeping it secret), the appropriate use of cryptography can be of major benefit to all IT users," she said. Sixty-nine per cent of companies questioned in a Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) survey cited security as a major inhibitor to purchasing over the Internet. Trusted Third Parties to be licensed An Electronic Commerce Act would license bodies offering cryptography services, known generally as Trusted Third Parties (TTPs). These would include Certification Authorities that would mainly issue certificates for electronic signatures, confirming people are who they say they are, and Key Recovery Agents that would help to recover encrypted data. Licensing will be voluntary, but the Campaign Against Censorship of the Internet in Britain (CACIB) says digital signatures that do not have a licence could be challenged in court with the effect that businesses will feel pressured to use licensed services to avoid expensive legal cases.
Law by Summer '99? Now the Queen's speech has placed the e-commerce Bill in the government's legislative programme, it is expected to be debated in the Spring and could become law by the Summer. More immediately, a consultation paper detailing the proposals could appear by the end of the month. A Competitiveness White Paper is also expected in early December. Six working parties were created last November to look at Britain's economic competitiveness. The input of the Information Age working party into the White Paper will deal mainly with e-commerce. In October, the government published Net Benefit, an agenda for electronic commerce. It gave a checklist of issues to be tackled: consumer protection, data protection, intellectual property rights, taxation, potentially objectionable material and the problems of encryption and authentication through electronic signatures. |
See also:
28 Sep 98 | Science/Nature
06 Oct 98 | Science/Nature
24 Oct 98 | Science/Nature
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