Board announced for new UK Council for Internet Safety
The UK Council for Internet Safety (UKCIS) is the successor to the
UK Council for Child Internet Safety (UKCCIS), with an expanded
scope to improve online safety for everyone in the UK. The
Executive Board brings together expertise from a range of
organisations in the tech industry, civil society and public
sector. Margot James, Minister for Digital and the Creative
Industries said:...Request free trial
The UK Council for Internet Safety (UKCIS) is the successor to the UK Council for Child Internet Safety (UKCCIS), with an expanded scope to improve online safety for everyone in the UK. The Executive Board brings together expertise from a range of organisations in the tech industry, civil society and public sector. Margot James, Minister for Digital and the Creative Industries said:
UKCIS has been established to allow these organisations to collaborate and coordinate a UK-wide approach to online safety. It will contribute to the Government’s commitment to make the UK the safest place in the world to be online, and will help to inform the development of the forthcoming Online Harms White Paper. Priority areas of focus will include online harms experienced by children such as cyberbullying and sexual exploitation; radicalisation and extremism; violence against women and girls; hate crime and hate speech; and forms of discrimination against groups protected under the Equality Act, for example on the basis of disability or race. CEO of Internet Matters Carolyn Bunting said:
ENDSNotes to Editors:The UKCIS Executive Board consists of the following organisations:
The UKCIS Executive Board is jointly chaired by Margot James, Minister for Digital and the Creative Industries (Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport); Victoria Atkins, Minister for Crime, Safeguarding and Vulnerability (Home Office); and Nadeem Zahawi, Minister for Children and Families (Department for Education). It also includes representatives from the Devolved Administrations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Board membership will be kept under periodic review, to ensure it represents the full range of online harms that the government seeks to tackle. Achievements of the UK Council for Child Internet Safety include:
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