Legal provisions of COM(2001)690 - Intermediate evaluation of the implementation of the multiannual Community action plan on promoting safer use of the Internet by combating illegal and harmful content on global networks - Main contents
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dossier | COM(2001)690 - Intermediate evaluation of the implementation of the multiannual Community action plan on promoting safer use of the ... |
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document | COM(2001)690 |
date | November 23, 2001 |
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52001DC0690
Communication from the Commission to the Council, the European Parliament, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions - Intermediate evaluation of the implementation of the multiannual Community action plan on promoting safer use of the Internet by combating illegal and harmful content on global networks /* COM/2001/0690 final */
COMMUNICATION FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS Intermediate evaluation of the implementation of the multiannual Community action plan on promoting safer use of the Internet by combating illegal and harmful content on global networks
1. Introduction
This Communication concerns the intermediate evaluation of the multiannual Safer Internet Action Plan. The evaluation was carried out by a company contracted on the basis of an open call for tenders issued by DG Information Society in the summer of 2000. The evaluation was carried out during the period November 2000 to April 2001. The executive summary of the evaluation report is annexed to this Communication.
Business Development Research Consultants Limited.
Intermediate Evaluation of the Internet Action Plan: Final Report, May 2001, Business Development Research Consultants Ltd, http://europa.eu.int/information_society/programmes/evaluation/index_en.htm
iap.
2. Background
The aim of the Safer Internet Action Plan (henceforth the Action Plan) is to ensure the implementation of the various European Union initiatives on how to deal with undesirable content on the Internet. To this end, the Action Plan has been designed to support a range of non-regulatory measures. The Action Plan's objectives, specified in its European Parliament and Council Decision , are to:
Preamble to Annex I of Decision 276/1999/EC of 25 January 1999 (OJ L 33, 6.2.1999, p. 1).
- incite the actors (industry, users) to develop and implement adequate systems of self-regulation;
- pump-prime developments by supporting demonstrations and stimulating the application of technical solutions;
- alert and inform parents and teachers, in particular through their relevant associations;
- foster cooperation and the exchange of experiences and best practices;
- promote coordination across Europe and between the actors concerned;
- ensure compatibility between the approach taken in Europe and elsewhere.
The Action Plan covers a period of four years from 1 January 1999 to 31 December 2002 with a budget of 25 million euro. The Action Lines are:
(1) Promotion of self-regulation and a European network of hotlines to achieve a high level of protection (especially dealing with content such as child pornography, racism or anti-Semitism).
Via advice (rather than financial support) to self-regulatory bodies.
A hotline is a centre allowing users to report content that they come across in the course of using the Internet which they consider to be illegal.
(2) Demonstration and application of effective filtering services and compatible rating systems that empower users and take account of cultural and linguistic diversity.
(3) Promotion of awareness actions directed at users, in particular children, parents and teachers, to allow them to use Internet resources safely and with confidence.
The main mechanism for implementing the Action Plan is the co-financing of projects selected on the basis of public calls for proposals. As of 1 April 2001, 19 projects were running involving 87 organisations. Five projects are hotlines (covering a total of 12 hotlines spanning 10 countries), five are in the field of filtering and rating, and nine are awareness projects. The total funding of all cost-shared projects under the 1999 and 2000 budgets is 10 030 119 euro. The average amount of funding per project is 501 506 euro (smallest 49 650, largest 1 931 303). The average amount of Community funding received by the 87 participating organisations is 115 289 euro.
3. Evaluation objectives
The Safer Internet Action Plan evaluation assessed the relevance of the Action Plan's objectives, priorities and means of implementation in the light of regulatory, technological and market developments; the effectiveness of the programme's theory of action (intervention logic); the efficiency of the Action Plan's organisation and management; and issues related to complementarity and sustainability. The evaluators took into account the recent evaluation of the measures taken to protect minors and human dignity foreseen by the recommendation adopted by the Council on this issue.
COM(2001) 106, 27.2.2001.
Adopted on 24.09.1998: OJ L 270, 7.10.98, p. 48.
4. Evaluation findings
The evaluators found that the Action Plan has been successfully implemented. The focus of its Action Lines is still highly relevant, though arrangements should be made to track legal and regulatory developments and to monitor and assess changes in technologies and markets. The majority of projects would not have commenced without Action Plan funding. The report stresses that it is important for future work to take account of newly emerging channels of access to the Internet and new means of interaction between Internet users , and to continue to cover areas of content besides child pornography in a balanced manner.
For example, personal digital assistants (PDAs) using third-generation mobile telephony (3G).
Such as chat-rooms and instant messaging services.
The evaluators determined that the Action Plan has been very effective in generating projects, though there is potential for duplication of effort within the Action Line on awareness, and a number of participants had stated that finding suitable international partners had proved quite difficult. The report notes the need for reflection on the likely sustainability of the effects of projects after Community funding ceases.
The evaluators found that problems so far encountered during the Action's implementation were relatively minor: there were some delays in awarding contracts, and the application forms had been found to be too complex by some participants. The evaluators also found that more could be done to raise the profile of both individual projects and the Action Plan as a whole.
5. Recommendations and Commission comments
The evaluation report contains fifteen recommendations :
See the attached executive summary and pp. 54 et seq. of volume one of the evaluation report.
Content and coverage
(1) The broad division into three main action lines in the current IAP (Hotlines & Self-Regulation, Awareness, and Rating & Filtering) should be retained in any future Action.
Comment: This is an important conclusion, which the Commission will bear in mind when preparing any proposal for a follow-on to the Action Plan.
(2) The action lines should be extended to cope with the impact of new technology.
Comment: A workshop entitled 'Safer use of new interactive technologies' was held on 11-12 June 2001 specifically to deal with this issue. The results of the workshop will also be fed into the decision-making process on a possible successor action plan. Filtering projects selected under the 2001 call for proposals and projects selected under the 2002 call will be encouraged to take account of new technology.
(3) The Action Plan should ensure a balanced scope in terms of content categories handled.
Comment: The Action Plan does offer scope to cover a range of issues (such as racism and xenophobia) mentioned by those interviewed as requiring attention. The existing calls for proposals allow projects covering such issues to be submitted, and the forthcoming 2002 call will be so worded as to make this clear also.
Implementation
(4) The application procedures should use simpler forms.
Comment: Work is underway to simplify the forms by concentrating on the essential points and giving clear and brief explanations of how to complete them.
(5) Delays between project approval and contract signing should be reduced.
Comment: Progress already made in this direction will be reinforced by:
(a) simplifying the forms by concentrating on the essential points and giving clear and brief explanations of how to complete them;
(b) re-designing the forms to reduce the number of errors made in completing them;
(c) identifying as early as possible likely areas of difficulty at contract negotiation (in particular financial viability) and offering advice on possible solutions.
Achieving the objective does, however, also require the project partners to contribute by filling out the resulting forms accurately and supplying supporting documentation promptly.
(6) Assistance from the Action Plan with partner identification should be considered.
Comment: More prominence will be give to the existing online partner search mechanism in conjunction with the work on programme visibility (see response to Recommendation 14, below).
(7) Efforts should be made to increase the consistency of advice provided by the Action Plan to projects in relation to the financial application forms.
Comment: The main difficulty has been with advising partners on how to meet the financial viability test where their financial net worth was insufficient to cover their cost share, and the extent to which co-ordination tasks could be subcontracted. This was under review within the Commission during the first project negotiations. It is now clearer what advice can be given, and the advice which projects receive should therefore be consistent throughout the process. The Commission makes a particular effort at each stage to give information so that organisations are aware of the rules.
(8) Projects should ensure adequate resource is given to media and press coverage, and visibility.
Comment: This is an important point and is linked to the Commission services' efforts on programme visibility (see response to Recommendation 14, below). The Commission services will give advice to projects on how best to attract media attention.
(9) The Action should review efforts to support project sustainability.
Comment: The Commission is keen to ensure that projects that are supported continue to produce effects once funding ceases. The Commission will see if there are any steps that it can take to encourage this process.
(10) The Action should consider ways to manage the potential overlap between awareness projects.
Comment: Projects have been asked to include work packages on collaboration with other projects and also have to report back to the Commission services regularly. Projects were informed as soon as they were selected of the existence of other awareness projects, and encouraged to contact them to discuss possible collaboration. These contacts were reinforced by a meeting in January 2001 attended by all the awareness projects. The Safer Internet Awareness Exchange has been specifically designed to assist the awareness projects and others interested in safer Internet awareness-raising. This offers a degree of flexibility in organising both face-to-face and online meetings and the use of the web and electronic mail to share information and awareness resources, exchange experience, share good practice and publicise project results and news items. The need to avoid overlap will be given particular attention under the 2002 call for proposals.
(11) Projects funded under the Action should be structured in such a way as to allow the formal measures of success to be evaluated.
Comment: The Commission will ensure that wherever possible the work programmes of projects include specific measurable targets and that project deliverables are clearly defined. It will require that periodic management reports by contractors give information on the achievement of targets (and reasons for failure to achieve them, if that is the case). The Commission will ask for project reviews carried out by external experts to include specific comments on the quality of information supplied under this heading and the conclusions to be drawn from that information (or lack of information).
Regulatory, technological and market trends
(12) The Action Plan should consider putting into place formal arrangements to track legal and regulatory developments.
(13) The Action Plan should consider putting into place formal arrangements to monitor and evaluate technological and market developments.
Comment on 12. and 13.: Tracking of relevant legal and regulatory developments has been put in place in the context of support for self-regulation. Relevant technological and market developments and their socio-economic impact on safer use of the Internet will be reviewed through reports, forums or workshops.
Wider issues
(14) The Action Plan needs to have a higher profile and gain wider awareness itself.
Comment: Work is underway to increase the visibility of the Action Plan. The Commission services have targeted relevant conferences to seek speaking slots and to distribute documentation. A new website has been launched to make activities in the field more accessible, and a leaflet published in 11 languages. A list of journalists specifically interested in the Commission's activities in the fields of the Information Society and in safer Internet issues has been drawn up in collaboration with the Commission's Spokesperson's service.
http://www.saferinternet.org.
(15) The Action Plan should consider more links to activities and organisations outside the EU.
Comment: A particular effort will be made to set up such links on a reciprocal or multilateral basis, and to include expertise from outside the European Union in the reports, forums or workshops mentioned in the comment on 12 and 13 above. The Action Plan's legal base specifically mandates the Commission to ensure that the international nature of the Internet is taken into account. The Commission has closely followed developments in other parts of the world, and has both organised and attended a number of important meetings with European and worldwide coverage. The Commission is also taking part in the negotiations for the Council of Europe's convention on cybercrime. Certain projects already have an international component and a network of links outside Europe.
6. Conclusion
The Commission takes full note of the findings and recommendations of the intermediate evaluation of the Safer Internet Action Plan. In the light of the Commission's responses to the evaluators' report, it invites the European Parliament, the Council, the Economic and Social Committee and the Committee of the Regions to:
(1) take note that the Safer Internet Action Plan has been successfully implemented so far;
(2) support the Commission in its drive to simplify administrative procedures, enhance the effectiveness of projects, increase dissemination of project results and stimulate public debate on safer Internet issues;
(3) assist the Commission in its work of increasing the visibility of the Action Plan;
(4) support the Commission in its activities to consult all interested parties and to examine possible follow-on activities, in particular to deal with new technologies and new categories of digital content and to examine the scope for broader coverage of issues affecting safer use of the Internet.
ANNEX
Executive Summary
This document is the final report of the intermediate evaluation of the Safer Internet Action Plan (IAP). The analysis, conclusions and recommendations are based on information gathered from IAP source documents, telephone and face-to-face interviews conducted with Commission experts, project participants and stakeholders, and documentary research in the legal, regulatory and technology fields. These conclusions are discussed in greater detail in section 10.
* Taking into consideration the views of participants and stakeholders, it is apparent that all three action lines are still highly relevant to the aims of the IAP and thought to be very worthwhile.
* Rating and filtering is an emerging technological area, and it is important that future projects take into account the fact that they should work in the context of new channels of access (e.g. the ability to have full internet access from 3G PDAs).
* There is a clear priority to focus on protecting children, in the form of child pornography. However, participants and stakeholders alike take the view that other areas of content are also very important and should also retain a high profile in the work of the IAP.
* Implementation of the objectives of the IAP is manifest in the application and selection procedures, and the ongoing support provided to successful projects. In as much as a range of projects have successfully applied for funding, this demonstrates that implementation is working.
* However, feedback from participants does indicate that the implementation could be made easier and more user friendly, with the result that the process would become faster and less bureaucratic.
* It is also true that the delays noted by participants in the contract process do have a significant impact on them in financial and staffing terms.
* The implementation of the action plan has also been hindered by project participants receiving conflicting information from the IAP in response to queries arising from the application and financial forms.
* Yet all participants praise the IAP for its responsiveness and support.
* Based on our discussions with participants and stakeholders, the Action is currently very effective in generating working projects in all three action lines.
* However, it is apparent from questions relating to awareness about the IAP that there could be more done to raise the profile of the Action Plan as a whole, and thereby raise interest and enquiries from additional potential projects.
* It was noted during the research process that there is potential for significant duplication of effort by projects within the Awareness action line.
* A number of participants noted that finding partners who were acceptable to the IAP was quite difficult. And the delays incurred through the loss of a partner during the application process can have a significant effect on the success of a project.
* It is clearly desirable for projects to have a sustained impact and operation after funding has ceased. In this respect, project participants representing a majority of projects stated that their work was unlikely to have commenced without IAP funding. In this respect, there is a direct causal link between funding being provided, and project work commencing.
* There is considerable impetus towards the harmonisation both of substantive and procedural law in relation to all forms of cybercrime, including those relating to harmful content. The main locus has been the Council of Europe Cybercrime Convention, but there have also been activities at G8.
* The main problems regarding harmonisation have centred around law enforcement wishes in relation to data interception and retention capabilities and how these interact with the European Convention on Human Rights and Data Protection legislation. In fact, the more gradual approach by the Commission and the Council's framework decision of May 2000 may actually bring more rapid results.
* Throughout the Community there is a desire that ISPs and telecommunications companies continue to roll out very low cost or 'free' services and 'always on' broadband services. To an extent, the pressures on ISPs and others to keep tariffs low may make it difficult for them to take on the financial burden of such desirable policies and content filtering and moderation of chat rooms.
* Chat rooms and Instant Messaging Services have both grown extensively in popularity since the IAP started; Chat rooms in particular give concern because of the potential for participants to take on wholly false identities; in both cases self-regulation and law enforcement measures, although possible may be quite limited, which means that there may need to be a greater emphasis on education and awareness actions.
* The Report also looks at certain emerging technologies such as peer-to-peer, WAP, I-Mode, Interactive TV and 3G. None of these are thought to have an immediate effect on the second half of the current IAP, though the Action will need to continue to monitor events.
Based on these conclusions the evaluators have made the following recommendations. These recommendations are discussed in greater detail in section 11.
Action Lines
(1) The broad division into three main action lines in the current IAP (Hotlines & Self-Regulation, Awareness, and Rating & Filtering) should be retained in any future Action.
(2) The action lines should be extended to cope with the impact of new technology.
(3) The IAP should ensure a balanced scope in terms of content categories handled.
Implementation
(4) The application procedures should use simpler forms.
(5) Delays between project approval and contract signing should be reduced.
(6) Assistance from the IAP with partner identification should be considered.
(7) Efforts should be made to increase the consistency of advice provided by the IAP to projects in relation to the financial application forms.
(8) Projects should ensure adequate resource is given to media and press coverage, and visibility.
(9) The IAP should review efforts to support project sustainability.
(10) The IAP should consider ways to manage the potential overlap between awareness projects.
(11) Projects funded under the Action Plan should be structured in such a way as to allow the formal measures of success to be evaluated.
Trends in Law and Technology
(12) The IAP should consider putting in place formal arrangements to track legal and regulatory developments.
(13) The IAP should consider putting in place formal arrangements to monitor and evaluate technological and market developments.
Wider Issues
(14) The IAP needs to have a higher profile and gain wider awareness itself.
(15) The IAP should consider more links to activities and organisations outside the EU.