Home Office photograph

Home Office

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HeadquartersLondon
United Kingdom
FoundedUnited Kingdom
Subsidiary HM Passport Office
Officeholders Brandon Lewis
Dominic Raab
Priti Patel
Jurisdiction United Kingdom
England and Wales
PredecessorsNational School of Government
National Policing Improvement Agency
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1364741
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About Home Office


The Home Office is a ministerial department of Her Majesty's Government of the United Kingdom, responsible for immigration, security and law and order. As such it is responsible for policing in England and Wales, fire and rescue services in England, and visas and immigration and the Security Service.

Chris Mason: Ministers in new bid to reduce immigration

Chris Mason: Ministers in new bid to reduce immigration
Dec 4,2023 7:11 am

... I am told relations between the Home Office and Downing Street are considerably improved since the sacking of former Home Secretary Suella Braverman...

Muriel McKay's daughter urges Met to let mother's killer find body

Muriel McKay's daughter urges Met to let mother's killer find body
Dec 2,2023 3:31 am

... She said the Home Office had delegated matters to the Met, who did not seem interested...

Pontins: Former holiday park giant shrinks further

Pontins: Former holiday park giant shrinks further
Dec 1,2023 12:21 pm

... Following speculation, the Home Office has clarified that the closed parks to house asylum seekers...

Belton House: Inquiry continues into country house assault death

Belton House: Inquiry continues into country house assault death
Dec 1,2023 8:41 am

... " Part of our investigation is around establishing the exact cause of death, which will be done following a formal Home Office post mortem examination at some point next week, " a force spokesperson said...

Asylum seekers: Home Office says more than 17,000 are missing

Asylum seekers: Home Office says more than 17,000 are missing
Nov 29,2023 10:01 am

...By Callum May & Suzanne LeighBBC NewsHome Office officials have admitted they do not know the whereabouts of more than 17,000 asylum seekers whose claims have been discontinued...

UK net migration in 2022 revised up to record 745,000

UK net migration in 2022 revised up to record 745,000
Nov 23,2023 9:21 am

... Home Office figures, also published on Thursday, showed hotel use reached a record high in September - despite a slight fall in the asylum backlog...

Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank

Households to be £1,900 poorer, says think tank
Nov 23,2023 4:21 am

... The chancellor managed to make these cuts at the expense of not raising public spending in line with the pace of general price rises, meaning departments such as justice, local government and the Home Office face a £17bn budget cut by 2027-28, it added...

Just Stop Oil: Rishi Sunak defends 'severe' jail sentences

Just Stop Oil: Rishi Sunak defends 'severe' jail sentences
Nov 21,2023 1:21 pm

... The Home Office said it had " responded" to the special rapporteur s letter...

Encryption: UK data watchdog criticises government campaign

Nov 21,2023 8:41 am

A Home Office -backed campaign against the rollout of ultra-secure messaging apps by Social Media firms has been criticised by the UK data watchdog.

The No Place to Hide campaign says Facebook should abandon plans for end-to-end encryption in its Messenger app, saying it helps to hide Child Abuse .

But The Information Commissioner's Office argues the technology strengthens children's Online Safety .

A delay " leaves everyone At Risk , including children, " it told The Bbc .

Stephen Bonner, the ICO's Executive Director for innovation and technology, said end-to-end encryption helped keep children safe online by not allowing " criminals and abusers to send them harmful content or access their pictures or location".

" The discussion on end-to-end encryption use is too unbalanced to make a wise and informed choice. There is too much Focus On the costs without also weighing up the significant benefits, " He Said .

End-to-end encryption (E2EE) is already used in the hugely popular WhatsApp, iMessage and Signal apps.

Meta plans to add it to Facebook Messenger and Instagram direct messages in 2023.

The System scrambles the contents of messages and calls so that only The End users can understand the data. Even The Company processing the communications cannot decrypt the content which means that law enforcement are unable to access The Information to potentially catch or convict criminal using the technology.

For years, authorities in the UK, Australia, Canada, New Zealand , US, India and Japan, plus law enforcement agencies such as Interpol and the UK's National Crime Agency (NCA) have criticised the technology.

Identify abusers

Launching the on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the No Place To Hide initiative said that rolling out E2EE would be " like turning the lights off on The Ability to identify child sex abusers online".

Videos have been released on Social Media claiming that the technology will put children At Risk from predators.

The Campaign says it is " not opposed to end-to-encryption in principle" but wants Social Media companies to " find a solution that protects privacy without putting children at even greater risk".

The Home Office backed The Campaign launch, saying: " Our view is that online privacy and cyber-security must be protected, but that these are compatible with safety measures that can ensure the detection of child Sexual Exploitation and abuse. "

But it declined to respond to The Intervention by the an independent public body which reports to the government.

The ICO argues that E2EE serves an important role in safeguarding privacy and Online Safety and says it looks forward to being a participant in the continuing discussion around the tech.

" Having access to encrypted content is not the only way to catch abusers, " Mr Bonner said.

" Law Enforcers have other methods such as listening to reports of those targeted, infiltrating the groups planning these offences, using evidence from convicted abusers and their systems to identify other offenders. "

The ICO says the government should continue to maximise law enforcement techniques instead of seeking to weaken encryption.

" Until we look properly at the consequences, it is hard to see any case for reconsidering the use of E2EE, " it said.

Rob Jones from The National Crime Agency told The Bbc any move to Roll Out of end-to-end encryption needed to " maintain The Ability to protect children and identify images of abuse. A jump to E2EE without this capability risks turning the Lights Out for law enforcement worldwide".

He added: " The NCA and UK policing currently make over 500 arrests and safeguard More Than 650 children every month as a direct result of industry reports of child sexual abuse material.

" That will become much more challenging under E2EE. "



Source of news: bbc.com

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