You are here: silicon.com > Management > Law & Policy

Law & Policy

ISPA awards: Home Office 'Hero' turns 'Villain'

Quite a turnaround...

By Matt Loney

Published: 21 February 2003 11:06 GMT

A Home Office official who was in the running for the coveted award of Internet Hero at last night's ISPA awards ended up walking away with the Internet Villain gong.

It was a watershed moment in the ISPAs, the ISP industry's annual award ceremony. An official from the Home Office, which is regularly nominated for the Internet Villain, actually turned up to collect the department's prize.

Ironically, the official, Simon Watkin, had been nominated for the Internet Hero award - which he failed to win. Nevertheless his appearance, said one attendee from a major ISP, demonstrated his department's desire to continue its new-found rapport with the industry.

On collecting the Internet Villain award Watkin, who had been nominated for the opposite honour for his work in trying to sort out problems with data retention proposals and for his efforts in liaising with the industry, said: "Being nominated for Internet Hero Award and collecting the Internet Villain Award shows the difficulty in helping you get on with business on the internet while making sure it is a safe place to do business."

It was Watkin who, in an unusual announcement at an ISP event last December admitted that the Home Office had got data retention wrong.

Several attendees at the awards said they admired Watkins for turning up to collect the most unwanted prize in the internet industry's calendar. Those who thought his only motive in attending was a hope of picking up the Internet Hero prize were proved wrong when Watkin asked for last year's Internet Villain award on behalf of the department, "which we're owed". Nobody from the Home Office appeared on stage at last year's ISPAs to collect the infamous gong.

However, on collecting his 'prize', Watkins did say: "I can go back to the office and pretend this is the hero award, until [my colleagues] read the stories online in the morning."

Winning the Internet Villain award, the Home Office saw off competitors including the Recording Industry Association of America, telecoms analysts, BBC Watchdog and, most unpopular of all judging by the response from the audience, Oftel.

  1. Zones
  2. Management
  3. Networks
  4. Software
  5. IT Services
  6. Hardware
  1. Verticals
  2. Public Sector
  3. Financial Services
  4. Retail & Leisure

  • Jobs
ASP.NET for Award Winner in South Wales

Award winning South Wales based company- brand new Web Development Vacancies Working on some extremely innovative projects, with the latest .NET ...

Liux support analyst- ISP- central belt- circa 28,000

My clients are an ISP who own their own data centre and want to built a new team around you, potentially! I have an amazing opportunity for a systems ...

C# web developer - Award winning agency

C# developer - Award winning agency Exciting opportunity for an experienced developer, to join an extremely successful company to work on a variety ...

CIO50 2008
The silicon.com CIO50 2008 profiles the most influential and innovative tech chiefs in the UK across all industries and organisation size, from the biggest FTSE100 companies to high growth dot-com start ups and the public sector. The list was voted on by the UK CIO community and a panel of experts. Find out more in our latest special report.





Quick Sitemap Links: