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Interview with Dave Miles

As Director of Safety Policy at Meta (formerly Facebook) for Europe, Middle East and Africa, Dave Miles has more than thirty years of executive management experience in the technology, regulatory and charitable sectors.

Among Dave’s significant career moments was his participation in the Child Dignity in the Digital World Congress and 2017 Declaration of Rome, returning to the Vatican in 2019 to respond on Facebook’s behalf to the Pope’s call to action.

He is optimistic that technology can now provide safer solutions for young people, and says the industry is highly motivated to keep its platforms safe, so that people will continue to use them.

“The challenge will be about balancing privacy and safety for young people. The UK’s draft Online Safety Bill is very exciting and Meta looks forward to its publication,” he says. “If we get it right here in the UK, other countries will follow. In 10 years, the internet will be a more mature, regulated environment and we will stop perhaps calling it the “Wild West.”

Often feeling marginalised in his state school gave Dave Miles extra drive, enabling him to surpass his predicted exam grades and go on to study history at the University of Kent in Canterbury. His career in computing has given him opportunities and responsibilities, like his current role as Director of Safety Policy for Europe, the Middle East and Africa at Meta (formerly Facebook), that his teachers certainly could not have foreseen.

In 1982, Dave joined the first graduate recruitment scheme at Currys, the electrical retailer, and worked on developing its new out-of-town stores. Home computers from companies such as Sinclair and Acorn were just taking off. Currys was a “fantastic grounding” in consumer electronics, he says.

On entering the computer industry, Dave rose quickly through various large tech companies in the south of England focused on Unix-based machines. His arts background enabled him to talk naturally about “benefits” as opposed to the “speeds and feeds” favoured by his engineering-based counterparts.

Then in 1989 he was hired by Jamie Muir at Packard Bell, to pioneer PC retail in the UK. There followed a series of demanding international roles at Compaq and IBM, but Dave also had three sons — one autistic — and life became “quite hard”, as we tried to meet his needs and ultimately, place him in a care environment where he could live independently. For a few years, he decided to reduce his travel commitments, prioritise work/life balance and switch focus to child internet safety.

“In 2007, I really changed my career — from an IT executive to the NGO environment,” he says. “The UK had a number of leading academics and experts in this area. The tech sector was growing enormously, with minimal regulation in child safety. I felt in the right place professionally, and that I could have a big impact.”

In 2008, he became Policy Director for EMEA at the Family Online Safety Institute, with offices in Washington DC and London, where he worked on child internet safety and internet governance.  Then 8 years later, he became an expert member of UNICEF’s Global Fund to End Violence against Children, as well as working with a range charities to tackle child sexual exploitation and abuse in the Global South, as part of the WePROTECT Global Alliance.

Among Dave’s significant career moments was his participation in the Child Dignity in the Digital World Congress and 2017 Declaration of Rome, returning to the Vatican in 2019 to respond on Facebook’s behalf to the Pope’s call to action.

He is optimistic that technology can now provide safer solutions for young people, and says the industry is highly motivated to keep its platforms safe, so that people will continue to use them.

“The challenge will be about balancing privacy and safety for young people. The UK’s draft Online Safety Bill is very exciting and Meta looks forward to its publication,” he says. “If we get it right here in the UK, other countries will follow. In 10 years, the internet will be a more mature, regulated environment and we will stop calling it the Wild West.”

Dave Miles was interviewed by Jane Bird for Archives of IT.

 

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