The Guardian (Charlottetown)

G7 ministers probe threats of ‘dark’ internet

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Security ministers from the G7 countries are discussing how to fight the threats lurking in the internet’s dark spaces against the backdrop of a city reeling from Monday’s deadly daylight van attack.

Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale was peppered with questions and offers of assistance from his G7 counterpar­ts after Monday’s tragedy, in which a rental van barrelled through a crowd of people on a north Toronto sidewalk, killing 10 pedestrian­s and injuring 15.

A major focus of the final day of the G7 ministeria­l meeting in Toronto was addressing violent extremism and preventing the internet from being as a tool for training, propaganda and financing.

“It’s the insidiousn­ess of the messaging on the web,’’ Goodale said in an interview ahead of Tuesday’s talks.

“That’s something that all ministers worry about.’’

Goodale and his fellow G7 leaders will be calling on major internet service providers that are also at this meeting — Google, Facebook, Twitter and Microsoft — to do more to prevent their platforms from being exploited.

Goodale said the service providers realize the need to cooperate, and will be discussing options with the G7 ministers. He said they will be urging service providers “to be quick and proficient, and quick and persistent in making sure their various services are not any kind of platform for terrorist material or terrorist activity.’’

“You do not want your platform to be known as a safe harbour for terror or sexual exploitati­on or human traffickin­g or political interferen­ce.’’

In Tuesday’s opening remarks, Goodale said cybertechn­ology has become “a disruptive force’’ with the potential to harm critical infrastruc­ture “and the power to more easily conceal identities.’’

In the interview, Goodale offered some insight into the closed-door discussion he planned to lead with his counterpar­ts.

“The one question that would always bother me is: is there anything we’re missing?’’ he said.

“You’re looking for the holes. When you’re dealing with this technology and you get into the deep, dark web, how much of it is encrypted, how much of it is inaccessib­le, how much of it is beyond technical capacity to crack into.’’

But there are thorny ethical issues at the heart of that discussion, the minister cautioned.

Goodale cited the recent controvers­y that has placed Facebook at the heart of a major scandal over the inappropri­ate use of its data in the United Kingdom’s Brexit campaign and Donald Trump’s successful U.S. presidenti­al bid.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Canada’s Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale and Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland make their way to a press briefing in Toronto on Monday.
CP PHOTO Canada’s Minister of Public Safety Ralph Goodale and Canadian Minister of Foreign Affairs Chrystia Freeland make their way to a press briefing in Toronto on Monday.

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