MENU
  • Loading ...
  • Loading ...

Grafton Accommodation

Latest News Grafton Accommodation

Are you looking for a holiday? Get special deals.

 

Changes to online safety bill tread line between safety and appearing ‘woke’

30 Nov 2022 By theguardian

Changes to online safety bill tread line between safety and appearing ‘woke’

The online safety bill is returning to parliament under the aegis of its fourth prime minister and seventh secretary of state since it was first proposed as an online harms white paper under Theresa May.

Each of those has been determined to leave their fingerprints on the legislation, which has swollen to encompass everything from age verification on pornography to criminalisation of posting falsehoods online, and Rishi Sunak and the digital and culture secretary, Michelle Donelan, are no different.

Some of the changes to the bill, which was unceremoniously pulled from the agenda in early summer as the government cleared parliamentary time to launch its own confidence motion backing Boris Johnson, are simple additions. After the law commission recommended updating legislation covering nonconsensual intimate images, the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport folded the changes into the bumper bill, announcing plans to criminalise "downblousing" and the creation of pornographic "deepfakes" without the subject's consent.

But others reflect the contentious nature of the legislation, which faces a balancing act between the government's desire to make the UK "the safest place to be online", and its fear of appearing overly censorious or, worse still, "woke".

On Tuesday, Donelan triumphantly announced that the latest version of the online safety bill would be dropping efforts to regulate content deemed "legal but harmful". Earlier drafts of the bill had hit upon a canny way to please both sides of the debate: rather than requiring social media companies to remove certain types of content outright, the bill simply requires them to declare a position on that material in their terms of service, and then enforce that position. Theoretically, a social media company could explicitly declare itself content with allowing harmful content on its platform, and receive no penalties for doing so.

But free speech groups, in and out of parliament, worried that the requirement would have a chilling effect, and social networks backed them up: few deliberately want to have harmful content on their platforms, but faced with a legal requirement to take action on it or face penalties, they could end up being forced to over-correct. For topics such as suicide or self-harm, aggressive over-moderation can cause real world harm just like lax policies can.

The push against those regulations reached its height during the Tory leadership contest, when the online safety bill was caricatured by its opponents, such as trade secretary Kemi Badenoch, as legislating for hurt feelings. And so upon its reintroduction, the "legal but harmful" provisions were stripped out, at least for content aimed at adults. And then the government went further: in an effort to burnish its free speech credentials, it added in new legal requirements forcing not over-moderation but under-moderation.

"Companies will not be able to remove or restrict legal content, or suspend or ban a user, unless the circumstances for doing this are clearly set out in their terms of service or are against the law," DCMS announced. The rules, described as a "consumer friendly 'triple shield'", could prevent companies from acting rapidly to ensure the health of their platform, and leave them facing a legal risk if they take down content that they, and other users, would rather see removed.

Some of the changes to the bill are deep and technical. But others seem to be simple headline-chasing. The government has dropped the offence of "harmful communications" from the bill, after it became a lightning-rod for criticism with Badenoch and others arguing that it was "legislating for hurt feelings".

But in order to remove the harmful communications offence, the government has also cancelled plans to strike off the two offences it was due to replace: parts of the Malicious Communications Act and the Communications Act 2003 which are far broader than the ban on harmful communications was to be. The harmful communications offence required a message cause "serious distress"; the Malicious Communications Act requires only "distress", while the Communications Act 2003 is even softer, banning messages sent "for the purpose of causing annoyance, inconvenience or needless anxiety". Those offences will now remain on the books indefinitely.

But becoming part of the psychodrama of the Conservative party is the only way legislative scrutiny can occur in this parliament. The rest of this monster bill, stretching over hundreds of pages and redefining the landscape of internet regulation for a generation, has barely been discussed in public at all. Proposals ranging from an attack on end to end encryption to the christening of a first-of-its-kind internet regulator in the shape of Ofcom are being treated as technocratic tweaks, but if they were given the time they deserved, it would be likely the legislative process would outlast a fifth prime minister as well.

More News

Booking.com
Texas' Arch Manning puts loss to Ohio State on his shoulders: 'I've got to play better for us to win'
Texas' Arch Manning puts loss to Ohio State on his shoulders: 'I've got to play better for us to win'
Ethics professor sues university, says he was fired over criticism of gender policies
Ethics professor sues university, says he was fired over criticism of gender policies
'Selective hearing' isn't a choice, scientists reveal - it's a real neurological process
'Selective hearing' isn't a choice, scientists reveal - it's a real neurological process
'Happy Days' star Henry Winkler insists one thing hasn't changed after decades in Hollywood
'Happy Days' star Henry Winkler insists one thing hasn't changed after decades in Hollywood
Archaeologists find 1,600-year-old churches and mural of Jesus in Egyptian desert settlement
Archaeologists find 1,600-year-old churches and mural of Jesus in Egyptian desert settlement
Harrison Ford, on third marriage, says 'old people can love too' as he shares what he's learned
Harrison Ford, on third marriage, says 'old people can love too' as he shares what he's learned
Kim Kardashian condemns Trump ICE raids targeting people who 'build our country'
Kim Kardashian condemns Trump ICE raids targeting people who 'build our country'
Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade
Cowboys legend Michael Irvin blasts Jerry Jones over Micah Parsons trade
NYT reporter: The closest Zohran Mamdani gets to socialism is his belief in 'treating people more equitably'
NYT reporter: The closest Zohran Mamdani gets to socialism is his belief in 'treating people more equitably'
TransUnion becomes latest victim in major wave of Salesforce-linked cyberattacks, 4.4M Americans affected
TransUnion becomes latest victim in major wave of Salesforce-linked cyberattacks, 4.4M Americans affected
Experts warn AI stuffed animals could 'fundamentally change' human brain wiring in kids
Experts warn AI stuffed animals could 'fundamentally change' human brain wiring in kids
Foreign travelers soon to pay 'visa integrity fee' to visit the US costing $250
Foreign travelers soon to pay 'visa integrity fee' to visit the US costing $250
Democratic state representative calls prayers after mass shootings 'theological malpractice'
Democratic state representative calls prayers after mass shootings 'theological malpractice'
Kohberger's lawyers didn't want him called 'psychopath,' but he searched the term regularly
Kohberger's lawyers didn't want him called 'psychopath,' but he searched the term regularly
Guardians pitchers' paid leave extended indefinitely as MLB continues gambling probe
Guardians pitchers' paid leave extended indefinitely as MLB continues gambling probe
Trump renews pitch to get Roger Clemens into Hall of Fame: 'If it were me, I'd sue them'
Trump renews pitch to get Roger Clemens into Hall of Fame: 'If it were me, I'd sue them'
Anonymous researcher exposes politicians' hidden Spotify playlists, including Vance, Leavitt and Bondi
Anonymous researcher exposes politicians' hidden Spotify playlists, including Vance, Leavitt and Bondi
Rudy Giuliani injured in New Hampshire car crash after aiding domestic violence victim, spokesman says
Rudy Giuliani injured in New Hampshire car crash after aiding domestic violence victim, spokesman says
Ilhan Omar pushes for assault weapons ban in the wake of Minneapolis church shooting
Ilhan Omar pushes for assault weapons ban in the wake of Minneapolis church shooting
Russian tennis star Andrey Rublev sounds off on US Open fine for profanity during match
Russian tennis star Andrey Rublev sounds off on US Open fine for profanity during match
Latest News

copyright © 2025 Grafton Accommodation.   All rights reserved.

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z