Clicky

Join the pushback against online censorship, cancel culture, and surveillance.

UK Tightens Grip on Internet Speech with Push for Swift Online Speech Crackdown

The UK communications regulator is pressed to tackle online "safety."

Roughly painted Union Jack flag with blue and black speech bubbles scattered across it.

If youโ€™re tired of censorship and surveillance, subscribe to Reclaim The Net.

UKโ€™s Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology Peter Kyle has written to the countryโ€™s media and telecommunications regulator Ofcom, asking it to implement what he said are โ€œkey componentsโ€ of the Online Safety Act.

These components of the legislation โ€“ also known as the UKโ€™s online censorship law โ€“ will come into effect by the end of 2024, Kyle noted in his letter to Ofcom Chief Executive Melanie Dawes.

Kyle urged Ofcom to implement these rules as a matter of urgency โ€“ Dawes is reminded that the government views this as โ€œincredibly importantโ€ and something that needs to be implemented โ€œas soon as possibleโ€ by the regulator.

The letter also reveals that these officials already had meetings dedicated to the issue โ€“ a โ€œdiscussionโ€ that Kyle said he wants to continue in order to see how the government can โ€œsupport Ofcom in delivering on this ambition.โ€

The need for this to happen is explained by the secretary of state as necessary in making sure that services covered by Ofcom are held responsible for delivering โ€œproducts safe for their users.โ€

Kyle cites illegal harms and child safety codes as more โ€œprotectionsโ€ that will be finalized next year, which include age verification (โ€œage-checksโ€). Internet users, and children in particular, will then, according to Kyle, be protected from a flurry of horrors: he mentions suicide, self-harm, pornography, terrorism, โ€œhate speech,โ€ misogyny, and harassment.

Other than age verification, this is to be achieved by forcing platforms to โ€œquickly take downโ€ content the codes treat as harmful.

Kyle then goes into the UKโ€™s summer riots in order to press Ofcom regarding the possibility of the agency introducing additional censorship measures to combat the spread of โ€œmisinformation.โ€

Dawes is asked whether Ofcom is now considering new โ€œtargeted measuresโ€ that can be included in the next version of the illegal harms code.

The UK government continues to put the emphasis on the spread of โ€œdisinformationโ€ as the key problem behind the riots, and Ofcom is now quizzed by Kyle regarding its assessment โ€œabout how illegal content, particularly disinformation, spread during the period of disorder.โ€

Another thing Kyle considers to be very important is the Advisory Committee on Disinformation and Misinformation, a body Ofcom is setting up under the Online Safety Act rules.

And the secretary of state is โ€œlooking forwardโ€ to learning how this is proceeding โ€“ โ€œand what its key areas of focus are likely to be following the events of this summer.โ€