Manawatu Standard

Rudd sets sights on online giants

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"We have to have a situation where we can have our security services get into the terrorists' communicat­ions. There should be no place for terrorists to hide.'' Amber Rudd, Home Secretary

Home Secretary Amber Rudd has vowed to ‘‘call time’’ on internet firms who give terrorists ‘‘a place to hide’’ as it emerged security services are powerless to access Westminste­r attacker Adrian Ajao’s final Whatsapp message.

Rudd said it was ‘‘completely unacceptab­le’’ that Whatsapp – which is owned by Facebook – was enabling terrorists to communicat­e ‘‘in secret’’, knowing the police and security services will not be able to read their encrypted communicat­ions.

She has summoned Whatsapp, Facebook, Google and a host of other online firms to showdown talks at the Home Office this week, where she says she will ‘‘call time’’ on extremists ‘‘using social media as their platform’’.

Ajao, 52, sent a final message via Whatsapp – which enables users to send text messages and pictures over the internet – just three minutes before he began Thursday’s slaughter.

But Scotland Yard and the security services cannot access what could be a vital clue in their investigat­ion because Whatsapp uses so-called ‘‘end-to-end encryption’’ which the firm says prevents even its own technician­s from reading people’s messages.

Detectives cannot find out who Ajao was messaging, or what he said.

In a scathing attack on Whatsapp, as well as Google and social media platforms which have failed to take down extremist material, Rudd said: ‘‘Where there are ongoing investigat­ions with terrorists – these people have families, have children as well, they should be on our side.’’

Rudd confirmed the Government was considerin­g legislatio­n to force online firms to take down extremist material, but said it was time for the companies to ‘‘recognise they have a responsibi­lity’’ to get their own house in order.

Other companies, including Google, have faced repeated criticism since the London attack for failing to block terrorist handbooks, including advice on how to use a car as a weapon and a guide on where to stab someone who is wearing a stab-proof vest. Ajao’s final victim Constable Keith Palmer was stabbed to death by him, despite wearing a stab jacket.

‘‘What these companies have to realise is that they are now publishing companies, they are not technology companies, they are platforms and we need to make sure that that stops. We will not resile from taking action if we need to,’’ Rudd said.

Whatsapp, which has a billion users worldwide, has said that protecting its users’ private communicat­ion is one of its ‘‘core beliefs’’. Company sources said that ‘‘with end-to-end encryption, Whatsapp does not have access to the content of messages. Only the sender and the recipient can read the messages’’.

But Rudd said: ‘‘We have to have a situation where we can have our security services get into the terrorists’ communicat­ions. There should be no place for terrorists to hide.

‘‘We would do it all through the carefully thought-through legally covered arrangemen­ts but they cannot get away with saying ‘we are a different situation’. They are not.

‘‘We need to make sure that organisati­ons like Whatsapp – and there are plenty of others like that – don’t provide a secret place for terrorists to communicat­e with each other.’’

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said the security services had ‘‘huge, huge powers of investigat­ion already – there is a question of always balancing the right to know, the need to know, with the right to privacy.’’ Asked if the balance was right at the moment, he said: ‘‘I think it probably is.’’

Whatsapp was blocked three times last year in Brazil for failing to hand over informatio­n relating to criminal investigat­ions. Rival messaging services such as Telegram are also encrypted, but their software has been written to enable law enforcers to access messages where they can prove it is a necessary part of a criminal investigat­ion. – Telegraph Group

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Britain’s Home Secretary Amber Rudd.
PHOTO: REUTERS Britain’s Home Secretary Amber Rudd.

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