The UK government has shelved its controversial "porn block", which would have introduced legislation enforcing age verification on porn sites in the UK.
In a written ministerial statement, Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) Nicky Morgan confirmed that the government "will not be commencing part three of the Digital Economy Act (2017)".
This act, which was dubbed the "porn block", would have made the UK the first country in the world to bring in robust age verification laws for online pornography. The age checks would have required uploading a passport or driving licence or purchasing a "porn pass" from a store to prove one's age.
The law was intended to make online pornography less available to children.
After repeated stalling and rescheduling, the government has eventually ditched the plan entirely.
"Adult content is currently too easy to access on the internet, we’re making sure the protections that exist for children offline are provided online too," a DCMS spokesperson said in a statement in May 2019.
Morgan echoed these sentiments in the statement on the shelving of the legislation and talked about the government's next steps.
Protecting children is at the heart of our online harms agenda, and is key to wider government priorities. Going online can be beneficial for children, who use the internet for connecting with peers, to access educational resources and for entertainment. However, the government is concerned about the prevalence of adult content online, which is easily accessible to children, and believes it is vital that children are protected from accessing inappropriate, harmful content.
But, it looks like DCMS hasn't abandoned its aim to introduce age verification checks. In Morgan's statement, she talked about the Online Harms White Paper, which the government published in April 2019. "It proposed the establishment of a duty of care on companies to improve online safety, overseen by an independent regulator with strong enforcement powers to deal with non-compliance," she said.
SEE ALSO: Someone reportedly hacked an Asics store screen to display porn for 9 hoursThe government has decided that its "objective of coherence will be best achieved through our wider online harms proposals and, as a consequence, will not be commencing Part 3 of the Digital Economy Act 2017 concerning age verification for online pornography," Morgan added.
The Digital Economy Act objectives will therefore be delivered through our proposed online harms regulatory regime. This course of action will give the regulator discretion on the most effective means for companies to meet their duty of care.
The British Board of Film Classification (BBFC) was appointed as the regulator responsible for ensuring compliance with the Digital Economy Act. But a spokesperson for DCMS told Mashable the regulator mentioned in Morgan's speech is "the yet-to-be-decided regulator for the wider online regulatory regime we set out in the Online Harms White Paper."
In a statement, a spokesperson for the BBFC said the introduction of age-verification measures for online porn is "a necessary and important child protection measure."
"The BBFC had all systems in place to undertake the role of AV Regulator, to ensure that all commercial pornographic websites accessible from the UK would have age gates in place or face swift enforcement action," the spokesperson continued.
The statement also noted that the BBFC "understands the government’s decision" to bring in age-verification as part of its online harms strategy. "We will bring our expertise and work closely with government to ensure that the child protection goals of the DEA (Digital Economy Act) are achieved," the spokesperson continued.
The government said it will continue to engage with MPs on the online harms bill to ensure the objectives of the Digital Economy Bill are delivered.
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
UK government ditches 'porn block'. What happens now?-口沸目赤网
sitemap
文章
33
浏览
88
获赞
4
Here’s how Apple will make your iPhone 12 pickup coronavirus
Apple’s new iPhone 12lineup begins dropping Oct. 23. The company’s latest mobile phone mOld Apple blogs are being turned into AI content factories with fake authors
Remember TUAW, or The Unofficial Apple Weblog? It was once a popular Apple blog which was shut downWith iOS 18, your iPhone can tell the time even when battery is near
The iPhone is a wonderfully versatile device, but if you've forgotten to charge it, and its batteryOpenAI's Sam Altman and Greg Brockman respond to safety leader resignation
This week, OpenAI's co-head of the "superalignment" team (which overlooks the company's safety issueTrump's letter to Turkish president is so ridiculous people didn't believe it was real
It's an especially concerning day to be living in Donald Trump's America.Shortly after House SpeakerYour future iPhone may have a screen that heals itself
Apple has been the subject of numerous rumors regarding its potential foldable devices, but the waitM3 MacBook Air hits all
GET $149.01 OFF: As of May 17, the 13.6-inch Apple MacBook Air (M3, 8GB RAM, 256GB SSD) is on sale fCybertruck issues: Buyers are reporting delivery delays due to windshield wiper problem
You're not going to believe it but folks who bought a Tesla Cybertruck are reportedly running into pAn 'SNL' star digs into his trauma in powerful doc 'Cracked Up'
Darrell Hammond was to the late '90s and '00s what Keenan Thompson is to now: Both are best known foIt's Britain's hottest day of the year and people simply can't cope
LONDON -- Complaining about the weather is a time-honoured British tradition.Normally we like to moaFisherman captures footage of epic battle between hammerhead and tiger shark
Despite what totally realistic movies like Sharknadoand The Shallows(or the original Jaws) tell you,Brits not happy about advice to take vitamin D supplements
LONDON -- The government announced Thursday that all Brits should consider taking vitamin D supplemeThe $80,000 Lucid Air: It'll be nice when we can drive it
Lucid they may be, but they're not exactly transparent. The buzzworthy Bay Area car company, which mWWDC 2024: Genmoji lets you create your own emojis with 'Apple Intelligence'
Apple revealed its all-new Genmoji feature at WWDC 2024, allowing users to create emojis using AppleHillary Clinton's reaction to the fireworks at the Democratic convention is everything
Honestly, who doesn't love fireworks? Immediately after Hillary Clinton delivered a powerful and his