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The UK's Controversial Online Safety Bill Finally Becomes Law (theverge.com) 185

An anonymous reader shares a report: The UK's Online Safety Bill, a wide-ranging piece of legislation that aims to make the country "the safest place in the world to be online" received royal assent today and became law. The bill has been years in the making and attempts to introduce new obligations for how tech firms should design, operate, and moderate their platforms. Specific harms the bill aims to address include underage access to online pornography, "anonymous trolls," scam ads, the nonconsensual sharing of intimate deepfakes, and the spread of child sexual abuse material and terrorism-related content.

Although it's now law, online platforms will not need to immediately comply with all of their duties under the bill, which is now known as the Online Safety Act. UK telecoms regulator Ofcom, which is in charge of enforcing the rules, plans to publish its codes of practice in three phases. The first covers how platforms will have to respond to illegal content like terrorism and child sexual abuse material, and a consultation with proposals on how to handle these duties is due to be published on November 9th.

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The UK's Controversial Online Safety Bill Finally Becomes Law

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  • by BigFire ( 13822 ) on Thursday October 26, 2023 @12:23PM (#63956111)

    He used to worked for UK censors during WWII and this is the inevitable path of the government.

  • Posting AC, - 1 Troll? Can't have that.

  • This dog has been chasing the same car since forever. Congratulations, you caught the car. Now what?

    I'm guessing the next step is applied magical thinking

    "... underage access to online pornography..."

    How do you determine age?
    What exactly is pornography?

    "... anonymous trolls..."

    Troll or unpopular opinion?
    Anonymous: pseudonym, pen name, registered IP address, ... ?

    "... scam ads ... "

    Would this be something like yet another Toyota ad for their Solid State Battery? (Couldn't resis
  • From the same country that passed the Communications Act in 2003. The UK seems to really like allowing their government to dictate what people are allowed to say, especially on the internet. As much as I lament how terrible things are getting in the US, at least (for now) we haven't devolved into letting the government have this much control over our speech.
  • As always, people will give up anything in the name of security, especially if worded properly, politician way. First of all, you have to say that "it's for children", or use any minority in order to appear "good". The tricky part lies in the last couple of words "against terrorism"... all this law will do is give more control to politicians over what people can see and talk about on the Internet.

    Remember: "Those who would give up essential liberty, to purchase a little temporary safety, deserve neither lib

  • ...because there is a lot of stuff in the middle.

We are Microsoft. Unix is irrelevant. Openness is futile. Prepare to be assimilated.

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