Click Here: <A
HREF="http://dailynews.yahoo.com/h/nm/20000515/ts/crime_cyberspace_2.html">G8
Nations Meet to Discuss Cybercrime</A>
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Monday May 15 8:46 AM ET

G8 Nations Meet to Discuss Cybercrime

By Tom Heneghan
PARIS (Reuters) - The world's leading industrialized states, struggling
against Love Bug-style computer attacks from the most unexpected places,
opened a cybercrime conference on Monday with a call to prevent lawless
``digital havens'' from springing up around the globe.
French Interior Minister Jean-Pierre Chevenement, addressing officials from
the Group of Eight (G8) nations and private industry, urged countries to
agree on a world convention on cybercrime and harmonize their laws to crack
down on hackers, virus writers, software pirates and other Internet
fraudsters.

Governments and high-tech companies should develop a ''co-regulation'' of the
Internet, he told the three-day conference aimed at launching a dialogue on
computer security between the public and private sectors.
]

(Requires Yahoo! Messenger) Drawing a parallel to international measures
against tax havens that hide hot funds and launder money, Chevenement said a
cybercrime convention being drawn up by the Strasbourg-based Council of
Europe should become a global treaty.
``The idea is to produce a global text so there cannot be 'digital havens' or
'Internet havens' where anyone planning some shady business could find the
facilities to do it,'' he said.
Countries also had to make clear to their citizens that the Internet was not
a lawless zone, he added.

``An adolescent should know that, even if he is very gifted in computer
science, the tricks he can play on the Internet could be serious crimes that
land him in prison. Internet isn't a toy anymore.''
The high-tech blitz that flashed around the world in an e-mail entitled
``ILOVEYOU'' this month showed how vulnerable computer systems are to attack
from anywhere. Unlike earlier viruses from the United States and Canada, the
``Love Bug'' was launched from the Philippines. The Paris conference, part of
longer-term efforts by developed countries to fight cybercrime, brought
together about 300 judges, police, diplomats and business leaders from the G8
states -- the United States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Italy and
Canada plus Russia -- and private high-tech firms.

G8 leaders will take up its recommendations at their annual conference in
July in Okinawa.
Chevenement said he hoped countries such as India, China, South Africa,
Israel and the East European states would join in the effort. In his speech,
Chevenement highlighted the transatlantic gap by rejecting the idea of an
international ``cyberpolice'' supported by U.S. officials eager to crack down
quickly on computer crime.

``Nothing could be more wrong,'' he declared. ``Sovereign states can develop
the capacity to act, first at home and then in international cooperation.''

French Prime Minister Lionel Jospin said in a message to the conference that
``freedom is the most precious gift the Internet brings us.''

All states should ``fight the digital divide'' between high-tech haves and
have-nots, he said, but at the same time ''restrain the excesses of an
unfettered freedom.''

Cybercrime has risen rapidly in recent years as the World Wide Web lives up
to its name.
A recent survey showed total losses to U.S. companies last year more than
doubled to over $266 million.

Chevenement said France registered more than 2,500 Internet-linked crimes
last year ``but that figure surely does not cover all big or small
infractions.''

Experts say high-profile attacks like the ones which paralyzed major
commercial sites like Yahoo! and Amazon.com in February are likely to
multiply as online services migrate to new platforms such as mobile phones.


Copyright © 2000 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved.
Republication or redistribution of Reuters content is expressly prohibited
without the prior written consent of Reuters.
Reuters shall not be liable for any errors or delays in the content, or for
any actions taken in reliance thereon.
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