
The UK Prime Minister, Kier Starmer, has today proposed last minute amendments to two Bills that will enable the Government to set a minimum age limit for social media (i.e. greater use of Age Verification), as well as options to age restrict or limit children’s use of Virtual Private Networks (VPN), where it “undermines safety protections and changing the age of digital consent“.
As regular readers will already know, the UK’s Online Safety Act (OSA) – a product of both the past and present governments – already includes a requirement for “highly effective” Age Verification. The original goal of this was to restrict the ability of children to access “harmful” adult content, such as porn, although political mission creep has inevitably started to cast a wider net and introduce ever more expansion censorship.
The latest proposals include plans to amend both the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill (CWSB) and the Crime and Policing Bill (CPB), both of which are already nearing the end of their debate cycle before achieving royal assent to become law.
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However, the proposed changes will first need to be guided by a new Children’s Digital Wellbeing Consultation, which is due to “launch next month” and will be “guided by what parents and children say they need now, not in several years’ time“. On the other hand, today’s announcement does rather make it sound like the Government has already made up its mind on the key issues.
The Government said “these powers will mean we can act fast on its findings within months, rather than waiting years for new primary legislation every time technology evolves … no platform gets a free pass“.
Key Changes Being Proposed
➤ A “crackdown on vile illegal content created by AI“. The government will shut a legal loophole and force all AI chatbot providers to abide by illegal content duties in the Online Safety Act or face the consequences of breaking the law.
➤ Setting a minimum age limit for social media.
➤ Restricting features like infinite scrolling that are deemed harmful.
➤ The government will also consult on how best to ensure tech companies can safeguard children from sending or receiving nude images in the first place.
➤ The government will “examine … options” to age restrict or limit children’s VPN use where it undermines safety protections and changing the age of digital consent.
➤ Strengthen protections for families facing the most devastating circumstances by ensuring that vital data following a child’s death is preserved before it can be deleted, except in cases where online activity is clearly not relevant to the death.
The key details around some of this are currently unclear. For example, we don’t yet know what sort of minimum age limit will be set (under 18s, under 16s etc.) or whether the government’s definition of “social media” extends beyond the major platforms (Facebook, X etc.), which might cause it to reach into other user-to-user services (e.g. small community forums about general topics that don’t appeal to children, help forums for sensitive subjects, chat systems inside online video games etc.). Suffice to say that there are a variety of technical, privacy, ethical and economic challenges, particularly for the smallest of websites that may lack the capability to adapt.
UK Prime Minister, Keir Starmer, said:
“As a dad of two teenagers, I know the challenges and the worries that parents face making sure their kids are safe online.
Technology is moving really fast, and the law has got to keep up. With my government, Britain will be a leader not a follower when it comes to online safety.
The action we took on Grok sent a clear message that no platform gets a free pass.
Today we are closing loopholes that put children at risk, and laying the groundwork for further action.
We are acting to protect children’s wellbeing and help parents to navigate the minefield of social media.”
However, despite the focus on children above, it’s important for adult users to understand that wider use of Age Verification will directly impact their own use of and access to such services, potentially preventing your access until such time as you agree to share your personal biometric or financial data with often unknown, unfamiliar and unregulated third-party organisations. The above remarks are particularly relevant when you consider that it may be mostly adults driving VPN usage to bypass age verification in order to avoid sharing their personal data with unknown entities.
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All of this is before we touch on the potentially far-reaching and unintended consequences of enforcing age verification on VPNs, which are also legitimate tools for businesses, journalists and to help protect people (security) when abroad or on public networks etc. Many such VPNs can be deeply integrated into modern protection and network optimisation systems, often acting seamlessly in the background, thus a blanket requirement risks being extraordinarily disruptive.
The reality is that, whatever the government decides, children who go seeking access to such systems and content will always find a way to circumvent any measures that are introduced – just as they always have done (e.g. people can create their own personal VPNs with ease). Instead, it often ends up being the innocent and harmless online services and security systems that could be hurt the most by the sledgehammer approach to age-gated internet censorship.
Finally, big questions also remain over how the government will go about awkward business of ensuring tech companies can safeguard children from even sending or receiving nude images in the first place, which could be difficult as many people these days use private messaging apps based around end-to-end encryption.
Please note that we won’t be able to approve any comments on this news article that appear to directly promote specific VPN services, due to the risk that this could clash with the government’s prior warnings about such promotions (here).
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As a dad of two teenagers Keir Starmer should know that his children do not have any devices that he did not give them. Starmer should take responsibility for parenting his teenagers by installing highly effective parental controls on his children’s devices. These are easy to use and cannot be bypassed as long as the parent does not give their child the pass codes.
The government cannot be this stupid. They must know none of what they are doing will work, and not only will not work will be highly damaging to the privacy and safety of adults and children online. No wonder so many people suspect an ulterior motive! Government spyware is coming to private messaging – how convenient.
The flip side is that a lot of parents are basically stupid/clueless….
Excellent in principle but I don’t think enforcing it will be very easy at all.
I see the blatant lies and misinformation out there, pure hate that has no place in a child’s life.
I’m glad the government are stepping in to help but it’s parents that should be the first line of defense.
On this issue I’m more than happy to be overreaching and safeguard my children from the cesspit that is the social media space.
I’m at an age where I can run rings around my kids concerning internet and technology in general so they won’t be able to fool me.
The usual crowd will say it’s government overreach but if parents actually parented the government wouldn’t need to step in and do it for them
The comments on the consultation are going to be worth a read, though many may well express their opion in public.
If implemented, this might put an end to Labour’s proposal to give 16 year olds the vote. 🙂
I think everyone should be concerned that they are making provisions in the Act that allow the government to bypass primary legislation in the future. Depending on the wording, it allows this and future governments to potentially introduce new restrictions and requirements at will. It’s a dangerous power to leave unchecked, especially when nobody knows who will form the next government, or what they will stand for.
Yep, similar tactics have been used to ban Apple’s encrypted file storage under powers granted by RIPA. All using secret orders and secret courts. It’s beyond belief in a so-called democracy. Politicians won’t even answer questions about it and the media let them get away with it.
The one thing I wish the government would take action about are AI videos on video Streaming sites peddling lies, often using images of news presenters and other well known people.
This govt is pure evil. All they think about is banning and taxing. Keir Stalin really wants to break the record for highest disapproval rating in any country ever
The next election can’t come soon enough. Labour needs zero seats