Cyber trust and crime prevention: executive summary
This report examines the future of information and communication technologies (ICT) and their impact on trust and crime prevention, focusing on the UK but with global relevance.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Quick Facts | |
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Report location: | source |
Language: | English |
Publisher: | UK Government Office for Science |
Publication date: | June 10, 2004 |
Authors: | Bill Sharpe, James P Kahan, Jonathan Cave, Lorenzo Valeri, Maarten Botterman, Martin Ince, Professor Brian Collins, Professor Robin Mansell, Rebecca Shoob, Robert Thomson, Sir David King, Stefek Zaba |
Time horizon: | 2018 |
Geographic focus: | United Kingdom, Global |
Page count: | 47 |
Methods
The research method included commissioning scientific reviews, expert workshops, and scenario planning. It involved over 260 experts and stakeholders from diverse fields to analyze the state of the art in ICT and its future implications.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Key Insights
The report explores the evolution of ICT and its implications for trust and crime prevention. It assesses how people place trust, perceive risk, and how identities and privacy are managed in the digital realm. It also examines the new opportunities for crime that ICT presents and the potential for reducing these through improved system trustworthiness and better management of criminal opportunities. The research involved expert workshops, scientific reviews, and scenario planning to envision the cyberworld of 2018 and the challenges it may pose. The findings are independent of government policy and aim to inform decision-makers in various sectors.
(Generated with the help of GPT-4)
Additional Viewpoints
Categories: 2004 publication year | 2010s time horizon | 2018 time horizon | English publication language | Global geographic scope | United Kingdom geographic scope | crime prevention | cyber opportunities | digital forensics | ict | identity management | policy implications | privacy | risk perception | system trustworthiness | trust