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G-8 discusses ways to combat cyber crime
By Vaiju Naravane
PARIS, MAY 16. Recent cyber crimes such as the ``I Love You''
virus have given the cyber crime conference of the G-8 nations a
certain edge. For three days over 300 representatives of
Governments, law enforcement agents, producers of information
technology (both hardware and software) and consumers from the
world's leading industrialised nations are discussing ways and
means of reducing or controlling Internet fraud and other
criminal acts in cyberspace.
``IT engineers do not often have the opportunity to meet those
involved in repressing fraud and vice versa,'' an official of the
French Foreign Office told mediapersons. The title of the
conference is telling: ``Dialogue between the public and private
sectors on security and confidence in cyberspace.''
The challenges are enormous: how can one continue to attract
consumers to e-commerce when a virus like ``I Love You'' can
strike at millions of computers across the planet. With 15-year-
olds (as in the case of ``Mafiaboy'') thumbing their noses at the
big daddies of the net, the situation has become a thorn in the
flesh of Governments and large corporations.
Until today, the hunt for cyber-pirates has been the
responsibility of each individual state. The U.S., of course,
stands head and shoulders above everyone else with the FBI
calling the shots. The U.S. postal services have trained 1,500
inspectors to fight Internet fraud. The Securities Exchange
Commission has a special force of 240 persons and the Federal
Trade Commission brings all these diverse bodies together in the
fight against Internet fraud. As usual, Europe has been lagging
considerably behind. But last month, there was an attempt to
react with the publication of a draft convention on cyber-crime.
Described as the ``first international treaty'' against such
crime, it attempts to promote the concept of ``tele-
investigation'' - whereby enquiries can be carried out online.
The security of information remains in the hands of several
fragmented and scattered bodies within individual countries. This
conference will attempt to create unified structures for fighting
Internet crime. The French Interior Minister, Mr. Jean Pierre
Chevenement, announced the creation of a new Central Office to
fight crime linked to information and communication technologies.
He also urged Interpol, the international crime fighting
organisation, to set up a 24-hour network of highly qualified
specialists who could intervene very rapidly once a crime had
been committed.
The novelty of the Paris meeting is that it brings Government
experts and technology leaders from the private sector together
for talks on how they can cooperate.
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