| LEAD ACTOR | ACTIVITY as set out at project launch in June 2004 | PROGRESS |
|---|
| Applying the outcomes |
| Home Office | High level workshop to explore implications for tracking offenders | Workshop for Paul Goggins at the Royal Society, 1 March 2005. CTCP informed changes to definition of fraud. |
| Cabinet Office | Working with a range of government departments to develop and deliver a programme of workshops to explore the long-term implications of the work for key areas of government policy (e.g. road user charging, e-crime strategy, UK information assurance strategy etc). | Goal was to hold six workshops. Three held: DfT: Road-User Charging (May 2004); Civil Contingencies Secretariat: The IT Revolution (Dec 2004); DCA: Data Protection and Freedom of Information (Mar 2005). The project informed the government information assurance strategy work. |
| PM's Council for Science and Technology (CST), Office of Science and Technology | Independent review of the use of personal datasets across government. Will use CTCP work to explore long-term implications. | CTCP people and reports helped establish CST's discussions on privacy and trust in the production of their report, scheduled for autumn 2005. |
Chief Scientific Advisors' Committee (CSAC) | Working session to identify implications for government departments' individual science and technology strategies and key policy issues. | CSAC discussed the project. A Grand Challenge on data management has made the shortlist, sponsored by MoD and DfT. |
| Exploring the further implications of the project's findings |
| Information Assurance Advisory Council | Hold 2 workshops in the next 12 months, open to all participants in the project so far. First workshop, in October 2004, will work with the existing project advisory group and others to explore ideas for "solutions" to challenges identified during the project. The second workshop, in Spring 2005, will take stock of progress made and suggest new actions to further trust and crime prevention. IAAC also intends, in principle, to progress CTCP after June 2005 for another year. | Workshops held on 14 October 2004 and 11 April 2005 brought together members of the network created by CTCP. Future status not clear. |
| Institution of Electrical Engineers | IT Sector Panel will review implications, especially in areas of dependable systems, IT procurement and professional standards. Special event on legal and regulatory issues, including contribution from Herbert Smith Research Policy Group will review implications for its forward agenda, and its interaction with national and EU science and research programmes | The IT panel continues to champion dependable systems. IEE helped influence changes to HMT Green Book guide lines on project management and resource allocation in regard to IT. Computers and Law event held on 8 November 2004. Responses made to the UK Science and Innovation Strategy. |
| Research Councils | Hold a meeting with relevant research programme managers across Research Councils to consider research areas suggested as a consequence of project. | Meeting held. A funding proposal for a cross-council network to continue that formed by CTCP is in preparation. Electronic crime prevention and detection included as a priority theme as a result of CTCP. £0.7m from EPSRC to projects chosen in the 2003 call for proposals. |
| BT & HP | BT & HP will work (with any other interested companies) to create a pre-competitive forum for cyber trust research within the UK. The forum will aim to:
- Act as a focal point for research in cyber trust
- Provide academics with a source of industry examples and contacts
- Produce an industry view on the future direction of UK research
| Industrial Research Forum between BT, HP, Microsoft and Qinetiq met and agreed positive actions needed to strengthen the UK's cyber trust science base. BT and HP also set up the Trustguide project, part funded by the Office of Science and Technology, to produce guidelines on enhancing cyber trust. Aimed at all those researching, developing and delivering ICT. |
| DTI Innovation Group | Look at the potential to inform future calls for proposals to make use of DTI Innovation/Technology Programme Funding. | Proposal for Knowledge Transfer Network cyber security and biometrics will be put to the Technology Strategy Board, Autumn 2005. Cyber themes included in calls for innovation support in 2004 and 2005 (ICT proposals as a whole received about a third of a total £230m allocated so far). |
| Royal Society | Review implications of public engagement workshops on cyber trust, as part of its Science and Society programme | A report on the public dialogue was published in October 2004. Royal Society has also launched a new investigation into the implications of ICT for healthcare. |
| British Computer Society | Hold "thought leaders' dinner" on the project to explore business/academic implications | Three dinners held on 26 Oct, 16 Dec 2004, 25 Jan 2005, over 80 people attended:
- Is network surveillance possible?
- Where is a precautionary approach to systems and software design commercially viable, or do we continue to live with reactionary measures to untrustworthiness for the foreseeable future?
- Designing ICT for crime prevention.
|
| Royal Society for the Arts (RSA) Forum for Citizens, Technology and the Market | Consider implications in the context of the Forum's work on best practice in engaging with the public on emerging technologies. | RSA initiative discontinued. |
| Real Time Club | Hold speaker-led dinner on implications for entrepreneurs | Held on 14 September 2004. |
| DTI | Raise the findings of the project in international initiatives in the EU, OECD and other bodies. | Presentation to the European Commission Research Directorate, 5 July 2004. CTCP informed government implementation of the OECD 2002 Security Guidelines. |