British Gov’t Changes Tune on Website Shutdown During Time of Social Unrest
- Posted on November 2, 2011 at 8:59am by
Liz Klimas
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LONDON (The Blaze/AP) — Just a couple months ago, the British government suggested shutting down social media sites being used to coordinate looters efforts in the London riots. Now, after further consideration on the topic, it is backtracking saying that governments must not clamp down on Internet and mobile phone networks at times of social unrest.
Foreign Secretary William Hague said the fact that criminals and terrorists can exploit digital networks is not “justification for states to censor their citizens.”
And Prime Minister David Cameron said governments “must not use cybersecurity as an excuse for censorship or to deny their people the opportunities that the Internet represents.”
After riots spread across England in August — with the help of instant digital communications — Cameron briefly raised the idea of giving British authorities greater power to disrupt the use of cell phone services or social networking tools during civil unrest.
In August, The Blaze reported Cameron as saying:
“Free flow of information can be used for good. But it can also be used for ill. So we are working with the Police, the intelligence services and industry to look at whether it would be right to stop people communicating via these websites and services when we know they are plotting violence, disorder and criminality.”
Cameron and Hague spoke at a two-day international cybersecurity conference that opened this past Tuesday in London. Their stance contrasts with calls by Russia and China for tighter regulation of the Internet through binding international treaties.
Britain supports the less proscriptive idea of internationally agreed online “norms of behavior.” That approach was backed by U.S. Vice President Joe Biden, who warned against imposing a “repressive global code” for the Internet.
“What citizens do online should not, as some have suggested, be decreed solely by groups of governments making decisions for them somewhere on high,” Biden said in a speech delivered by videolink from Washington.
Biden said the U.S. opposed “an international legal instrument that would lead to exclusive government control over Internet resources, institutions and content and national barriers on the free flow of information online. ”
The conference is being held amid a rapid rise in cyber attacks on governments and businesses — from criminals, terrorists and other states. Just yesterday, cyber attacks on at least 48 chemical and defense companies was traced back to China according to a report reported on by The Blaze.
Here’s a EuroNews report from earlier in the week, providing an overview of what was discussed at the conference:
Cameron said cybercrime cost Britain 27 billion pounds ($43 million) a year, and that the country faced daily “attempts on an industrial scale to steal valuable information from individuals and companies.”
The prime minister told the conference that governments “cannot leave cyberspace open to the criminals and the terrorists that threaten our security and our prosperity but at the same time we cannot just go down the heavy-handed route.”
“The balance we have got to strike is between freedom and a free-for-all,” he said.
Hague said Britain rejected “the view that government suppression of the Internet, phone networks and social media at times of unrest is acceptable.”
The British government took a tougher line after riots flared across England in August, the country’s worst social unrest in decades.
Police accused young criminals of using Facebook, Twitter and Blackberry’s instant messaging service to coordinate looting sprees. Several people have been convicted of inciting violence using social media, including two men jailed for four years each for trying to start riots with Facebook postings.
Cameron said after the riots that the government would look at whether cell phone services and social networks could be disrupted during disorder. Executives from Facebook, Twitter and BlackBerry maker Research in Motion Ltd. were summoned for crisis talks with senior government officials.
After meeting the media firms, the government said it would not seek new powers to shut down Facebook, Twitter or BlackBerry Messenger in times of crisis, but would “build on the existing relationships and cooperation to crack down on the networks being used for criminal behavior.”
Civil liberties groups said Britain and other Western governments should take care not to fall into a double standard.
“It’s very easy to defend the case of black and white — human rights against dictatorships around the world,” said John Kampfner, chief executive of Index on Censorship. “But as soon as our own Western-style stability of the state is called into question, well then freedom of expression is expendable.
“There should be one rule for all, including Western governments.”



















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scoter
Posted on November 3, 2011 at 12:25amhttp://www.helpfireobama.com Please give $20.12
Report Post »packsack54
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 2:43pmGotta go now, the door bell is ring?
Report Post »packsack54
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 2:40pmTell me which Europe country that the citizen own a rifle or pistol and knows how to use them? Yes it the crimmals in those countries. Police have guns, but it not to protect the people it is to protect them. Homeland Security is here and someday you will hear the knock at you door wanting your gold, silver and guns.
Report Post »packsack54
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 2:35pmRemember our government is trying to be like Europes. Broke and controll the people of their countries.
Report Post »qzak491
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 2:32pmThe British need to get the people from Bletchly park to come up with a code the government can use on these social networks so they can use them and the trouble makers won‘t know what’s going on. I’m sure with the stuff they have now, to play with, they can beat the Enigma machine the Gernans had. Use there tous against them.
Report Post »SamIamTwo
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 11:56amA smart government would use it for a preemptive strike….JIMHO
Report Post »KangarooJack
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 11:40amThey will/would do it again in a heartbeat!
Report Post »John Kettlewell
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:51amNet Neutrality says what
Report Post »SamIamTwo
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 11:57amIt’s not the tool, it is the handler of the tool that you need to worry about. Sort of like guns.
Report Post »Smokey_Bojangles
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:31amIt would make more sense to let you citizens arm themselves and protect their property than to try some Big Brother Commie Tactic.
Report Post »Darla_K
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:27amI wonder how long it will take Obummer to shut down our communications? He is going to do a test run on the 9th and maybe he will feel a tingle and decide he wants to do it again and again.
Report Post »Smokey_Bojangles
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:35amObama is setting the ball in motion for when he declares martial law and suspends 2012 elections.
Report Post »Eliasim
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:11amOh come on, that’s not why they changed their tune. They changed their tune because they don‘t want to tell you that they don’t have the power to shut it off.
Report Post »Stoic one
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 10:17amNature can shut down communications, therefore so can an entity such as a government.
Report Post »Snowleopard {gallery of cat folks}
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:10amSo the British government flip flops again; while we can expect definitly that Mr Obama will order the shut down and seizure of all web sights that do not absolutly support him when he makes his final grab for power.
Report Post »http://artinphoenix.com/gallery/grimm (cat folk gallery)
Darla_K
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:29amCan you imagine? This will be a sad day for alot of us and of course there are those that probably will think it is ok and see nothing wrong with doing this.
Report Post »Smokey_Bojangles
Posted on November 2, 2011 at 9:33amThe same people that support Cameras on every corner and constant road check points for instance?
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