杏吧原创

Three major UK parties respond to our technology manifesto

Proposals suggest liberals will again be drowned out by the drafters of the most extreme digital policy yet made by any democratic government

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WE INVITED three major UK political parties to comment on our six pledges. The first to reply was Labour, which told us it will raise the UK鈥檚 investment in R&D to 3 per cent of GDP, in line with other industrialised nations.

Its spokesman added that deputy leader Tom Watson has set up an independent commission on the future of work, looking at the impact of new technology and automation. That鈥檚 due to report back later this year. In its manifesto, Labour promises to 鈥渃lamp down鈥 on gig economy platforms that shirk their responsibilities as employers 鈥 but doesn鈥檛 specify how.

Beyond universal superfast broadband and giving young people the right to delete anything they posted online before they turned 18, Labour鈥檚 manifesto is a bit thin on substantial technology policies. One notable inclusion is a promise to 鈥渞eintroduce effective judicial oversight鈥 of government snooping, which was largely legalised last year under the Investigatory Powers Act.

The Liberal Democrats responded with a digital bill of rights, which threatens prison for those whose companies illegally sell personal data and promises to give people more power over their information online. It would also 鈥減rotect against internet giants and ISPs restricting competition鈥.

鈥淭he Conservative manifesto has some of the strongest statements on digital policy ever made鈥

The ruling Conservative party, expected to win comfortably, didn鈥檛 respond 鈥 but its manifesto includes some of the strongest statements on digital policy made by any democratic government. It effectively vows to retain EU laws that give citizens control over their data 鈥 again, allowing them to expunge any gathered before they were 18. And it pledges a Data Use and Ethics Commission to advise regulators and politicians.

The manifesto also promises to make the internet safer from cyber risks. It doesn鈥檛 say how, but Theresa May, as home secretary and then prime minister, instigated and pushed through laws widely criticised 鈥 including by New 杏吧原创 鈥 as illiberal and technologically illiterate. Both the Investigatory Powers and Digital Economy Acts give government sweeping powers, while arguably exposing users to greater risk 鈥 by outlawing encryption, say.

Digital platforms may also be obliged to protect 鈥渧ulnerable鈥 users from 鈥渉ate speech, pornography or other sources of harm鈥 by a new regulatory framework. Again, details are vague. While forcing companies to purge or block internet vitriol and extreme content may prove popular, the Tories鈥 approach 鈥 which to date has more closely resembled broad censorship than targeted harm reduction 鈥 will worry free-speech advocates.

This article appeared in print under the headline 鈥淭he parties respond鈥

Topics: Politics