Google, BT and a clutch of other web giants and internet service providers have been put on notice - the government wants action on sorting out the problem of harmful content on the internet.
In her letter to the companies, the culture secretary says there is widespread public concern:
"Whether these concerns focus on access to illegal ~~~~ographic content, the proliferation of extremist material which might incite racial or religious hatred, or the ongoing battle against online copyright theft, a common question emerges: what more can be done to prevent offensive online content potentially causing harm?"
"Woolwich is the latest catalyst," an aide to Ms Miller says. "Enough is enough - concentrated effort is now needed by the whole industry."
BBC News - Government demands action on web safety
There you go, the internet is obviously to blame. Maria Miller knows your thoughts, she has GCHQ read them every night while you're asleep. Harmful content will eventually become "questioning whether the government is right...."
Jim Killock, of the Open Rights Group, said the government should be talking about concerted international action against criminals posting illegal content, rather than attempting to blame internet companies.
In her letter to the companies, the culture secretary says there is widespread public concern:
"Whether these concerns focus on access to illegal ~~~~ographic content, the proliferation of extremist material which might incite racial or religious hatred, or the ongoing battle against online copyright theft, a common question emerges: what more can be done to prevent offensive online content potentially causing harm?"
"Woolwich is the latest catalyst," an aide to Ms Miller says. "Enough is enough - concentrated effort is now needed by the whole industry."
BBC News - Government demands action on web safety
There you go, the internet is obviously to blame. Maria Miller knows your thoughts, she has GCHQ read them every night while you're asleep. Harmful content will eventually become "questioning whether the government is right...."
Jim Killock, of the Open Rights Group, said the government should be talking about concerted international action against criminals posting illegal content, rather than attempting to blame internet companies.



)
Comment