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Online Safety Act

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    #41
    Originally posted by m0n1k3r View Post

    It's in section 236 in the legislation:

    “pornographic content” means content of such a nature that it is reasonable to assume that it was produced solely or principally for the purpose of sexual arousal

    It could in theory mean any content.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KaQ-s_P5mwM

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      #42
      Originally posted by WTFH View Post

      Thing is, the guys who are protesting about it because of porn, are skipping the bits about it also applying to websites that children would have access to that promote suicide, self harm and terrorism.

      Should we prevent children from being exposed to sites trying to indoctrinate them into terrorism? Lord Toby Young (whose party brought the bill in the first place), Nigel Farage, and many others of their ilk think we should not prevent it. They will backtrack and say something different should be done, safe in the knowledge that they will never be asked to draft up the legislation to deliver the "something different", but can come up with some simple slogan to deflect from doing anything.
      so how does this bill stop that? By demanding that websites that promote suicide, self harm and terrorism instigate age checks?

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        #43
        Originally posted by teknokrat View Post
        so how does this bill stop that? By demanding that websites that promote suicide, self harm and terrorism instigate age checks?
        Take a look at the link I posted on page 1:
        Online Safety Act: explainer - GOV.UK

        Basically, companies that host websites are now liable if they allow illegal content to be posted (such as the things you mentioned).

        Any site that allows users to share content or interact with each other is in scope of the Online Safety Act. These laws also require sites to rapidly remove illegal suicide and self-harm content and proactively protect users from content that is illegal under the Suicide Act 1961. The Act has also introduced a new criminal offence for intentionally encouraging or assisting serious self-harm.

        The Act also requires large services (Category 1 services) to uphold their terms of service where they say they will remove or restrict content or suspend users. If a service says they prohibit certain kinds of legal suicide or self-harm content the Act requires them to enforce these terms consistently and transparently. These companies must also have effective reporting and redress mechanisms in place enabling users to raise concerns about companies’ enforcement of their terms of service, if users feel that companies are not fulfilling their duties.

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