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SCIT speaks about proposed
anti-spam legislation
Following is the transcript (English
portion) of the Secretary for Commerce,
Industry and Technology (SCIT), Mr John
Tsang, speaking to the media after delivering
a speech on controlling spam at the luncheon
meeting of the Foreign Correspondents'
Club today (April 28):
Reporter: I am going to ask you something
about spamming. There are some groups
saying that if you introduce legislation,
it would appear that the Government is
intervening in the free market and infringing
free speech. How do you respond to that?
SCIT: I think as in all things we need
to draw a proper balance. On the one hand,
we need to guard against people's privacy,
people's preference not to be interfered
with junk spam and so forth. On the other
hand, we also need to take care of the
needs of the small and medium size enterprises
who may use this sort of means to get
business. So we need to find a balance.
We have been doing some consultations
in the community. When we have some definitive
measures that we want to legislate, we
will do further consultation and hopefully
the community will guide us in the direction
that we want to proceed.
Reporter: Can I ask you one thing about
the BT thing? The industry is sending
threatening letters to people who download
illegally. There is no legislation in
Hong Kong. How do you think it will help
the industry and other people to overcome
the intellectual property problem?
SCIT: There is legislation in Hong Kong
that would allow the film industry to
take civil action against people who infringe
against their rights. They can do that.
They need to proceed according to their
legal advice. They will continue with
that. We also encourage that because that
has definitely a strong deterrent effect
on would-be infringers.
Reporter: Do you think making an email
blacklist for sending mass emails will
allow other countries to come to Hong
Kong to do offshore financial services?
Will they see that as a potential for
a safer haven for that kind of service?
SCIT: Possibly. The different ISPs now
in Hong Kong all have their own blacklists.
Different ISPs carry their own blacklist
of notorious spammers. Each one of them
does that. What we want to do is to get
the ISPs together so that they could have
a master blacklist that they could share
among themselves, so that they would be
able to get the more notorious spammers
out of the way. They can filter it through.
It would help people not to get the unsolicited
things that they do not want to get. It
is one way of dealing with the problem.
Reporter: Does it encourage financial
offshore services to come to Hong Kong?
Is that one of the reasons behind that
legislation?
SCIT: That could be potentially one of
the outcomes. But we are not just thinking
about that as the primary issue. What
we are trying to do is to get rid of the
spam problem in Hong Kong right now. All
these other by-products will be an added
bonus if we could get them.
Reporter: Are you under pressure by any
industry player to come up with the spam
legislation?
SCIT: We have been planning to do anti-spam
legislation for quite some time. The pressure
has always been there, because it creates
huge economic cost on the society. This
is something that as Government, we should
do to bring better and more public goods
to the society.
Report: Should it be part of the works
of the private sector?
SCIT: There are certain things that are
the work of the private sector. That is
why we need a whole basket of measures.
But there are also things that will require
the coordination of the Government, because
we are talking about public goods now,
and things are becoming so massive that
it just goes across the society. This
is something that is proper for us to
do.
(Please also refer to the Chinese portion
of the transcript.)
Ends/Thursday, April 28, 2005
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