Government ministers from across the world have issued a call for greater
vigilance against cybercrime at the close of meeting on
the
future of the internet economy.
The
Seoul
Declaration came at the end of a two day ministerial conference on the
future of the web in the South Korean capital hosted by the Organisation for
Economic Co-operation and Development
(OECD).
OECD member countries, the European Community and ministers
from Chile, Egypt, Estonia, India, Indonesia, Israel, Latvia, Senegal and
Slovenia affirmed the declaration.
Participants agreed on the need for governments to work closely with
business, civil society and technical experts on policies that promote
competition, empower and protect consumers, and expand internet access and use
worldwide.
“Given that this infrastructure has become critical to our economies and
societies, we should all engage in developing better, more broad-based,
governance arrangements and policies,” said OECD secretary general Angel Gurría
in the closing session.
He called for a new approach to drawing up these policies. “A more
decentralised, networked approach to policy formulation for the internet economy
that includes the active participation of stakeholders.”
It is 10 years since the first OECD conference on the future of the web, and
the Gurria committed to review the declaration within three years.
It had been 10 years since the landmark Ottawa OECD ministerial meeting on
e-Commerce, he said, but “we cannot talk about the importance of the internet
every 10 years, which is an eternity in internet time.”
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