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Plan to list paedophile web
names
Sex
offenders could be forced to register their e-mail addresses and
chatroom names, the government says.
Paedophiles may be required to put online identity details on the
Sex Offenders Register. Mechanisms would be set up to "flag up"
approaches by them to sites popular among youngsters. One computer
expert said this was a step in the right direction, but added
internet identities could be changed "in a matter of seconds".
/Cont...
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Broader
Mr
John Reid said: "We already have probably the toughest regime in
Europe for identifying sex offenders.
"But although we are strong, we have to keep ahead of the game and I
want to bring in stronger, broader powers to protect our children.
If we did that we would then be able to set up mechanisms that would
flag up anyone using those addresses or those identities to make
approaches and contacts through some of the very popular internet
spaces which are used by kids."
Cliff Saran, technology editor of Computer Weekly, told the BBC News
website: "I have about five e-mail addresses. It's easy to set up a
new one in seconds... it's going to be hard to track that." The same
applied to chatrooms and networks like MSN, he added - "Come up with
a suitable name, and off you go."
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INTERNET ABUSE
Nearly a third of young people have received
unwanted sexual comment online or by text
Just 7% of parents know their child has been
subjected to such material
4.2 million websites contain indecent images
100,000 websites contain indecent images of
children
Source: Ceop
World net safety day
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He said the government's move was a step in the right direction and
the industry would co-operate - but opportunities would arise for
organisations to market "premium" - allegedly untraceable - e-mail
accounts.
If
everyone had a single internet identity for life, like a National
Insurance number, this would make it far easier to track people, he
said. Child internet safety expert John Carr, of children's charity
NCH, said: "This is a very welcome move. "It will mean that we can
extend the Sex Offenders Register
regime into cyberspace and that will be a great comfort to many
people."
Alert
Under present rules, sex offenders must list their name and address
on the Sex Offenders Register for a period of years after conviction
or even for the rest of their lives. However it is feared that some
continue to find a way around the existing system. Last month
newspaper reports said police forces across the UK had lost track of
322 convicted sex offenders.
The News of the World claimed one paedophile who had breached
register conditions had given his address as "woods" after moving
from "a tent near Guildford leisure centre".
The latest proposal means their online identities would be treated
in exactly the same way as their real name, a Home Office spokesman
said.
Failure to divulge all the information required could lead to a jail
term of up to five years.
Prof Allyson MacVean, director of the John Grieve Centre for
Policing and Community Safety at London's Metropolitan University,
said police should be able to search sex offenders' homes and
computers. "Internet addresses are so easy to make up and it doesn't
give any sense of who the person is or where their location is." She
said this was why the police needed access to sex offenders'
computers without needing to apply for a warrant.
adapated from
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/6333673.stm
6 Feb 2007
Cross-border cooperation in the European Union to prevent sex offenders from working with children.
Read the briefing from the
NSPCC, February 2007
Research shows that children are more likely
to be sexually abused by someone they know including relatives,
family friends and people in positions of trust than by a stranger.
Children do not always tell about abuse and abuse can continue for
years. Read the NSPCC
Sexual Abuse Briefing, 2006
Downing Street says there are "genuine
difficulties" in allowing the public to have more information about
the whereabouts of paedophiles.
Read More
Join our community at the
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Name
and Shame
illegal content
The Internet Watch Foundation
indicates that the USA and Russia between them appear to host the
majority of illegal child images.

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