DHAKA NEWS
Dhaka, Apr 9 Although the telecom regulator formed a special team almost three months back to crack down on cyber crimes, it is yet to devise a way to pass on cyber crime-related information to the team.
The Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) formed the 11-member Bangladesh Computer Security Incident Response Team (BD-CSIRT) on Jan 25 to curb cyber crimes.
The team is tasked to mark websites with contents that could spread social, political, religious or national hatred.
But the people are yet to know to whom and where to contact to lodge a complaint, as BRTC has not provided name of any website or an email address, thus forcing them to knock at the doors of the court of law for blocking objectionable websites and web pages.
Giasuddin Ahmed, vice-chairman of the commission, who heads the team drawn from commission members, on Monday told that a website and an email address for the purpose will be made available soon.
"CSIRT members will sit in a meeting soon to discuss it," he added.
Ahmed said: "The website and email address will be disclosed soon after the meeting so that the internet users can make complaints directly to the telecom regulator."
BRTC had to act after the High Court on Mar 21 ordered authorities concerned to block five Facebook pages and a website for hurting people's religious sentiments, and identify the people behind them.
The regulator formed the team days after the army said it had foiled an attempted coup by hardline former and serving officers, who used internet and mobile phones to communicate with each other and to provoke others to join the move.
Earlier, a university teacher had in his Facebook status wished death to the prime minister, leading to much uproar.
According to the law, people accused of committing cyber crime may be sentenced to two to five years in jail and fined from Tk 500,000 to Tk 50 million if found guilty.
The Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) formed the 11-member Bangladesh Computer Security Incident Response Team (BD-CSIRT) on Jan 25 to curb cyber crimes.
The team is tasked to mark websites with contents that could spread social, political, religious or national hatred.
But the people are yet to know to whom and where to contact to lodge a complaint, as BRTC has not provided name of any website or an email address, thus forcing them to knock at the doors of the court of law for blocking objectionable websites and web pages.
Giasuddin Ahmed, vice-chairman of the commission, who heads the team drawn from commission members, on Monday told that a website and an email address for the purpose will be made available soon.
"CSIRT members will sit in a meeting soon to discuss it," he added.
Ahmed said: "The website and email address will be disclosed soon after the meeting so that the internet users can make complaints directly to the telecom regulator."
BRTC had to act after the High Court on Mar 21 ordered authorities concerned to block five Facebook pages and a website for hurting people's religious sentiments, and identify the people behind them.
The regulator formed the team days after the army said it had foiled an attempted coup by hardline former and serving officers, who used internet and mobile phones to communicate with each other and to provoke others to join the move.
Earlier, a university teacher had in his Facebook status wished death to the prime minister, leading to much uproar.
According to the law, people accused of committing cyber crime may be sentenced to two to five years in jail and fined from Tk 500,000 to Tk 50 million if found guilty.
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