Political Censors Have Cynically Hijacked Vital Child Protections

The rise of populism has made the impulse to censor irresistible to its opponents, according to Andrew Orlowski in the Telegraph. Here’s how his latest piece begins:

Britons woke up last week to discover that their firehose of digital smut had been strangled, albeit temporarily for consenting adults. Undeniably, the introduction of age verification regulations does mark a huge change in our relationship with the internet, hitherto a pornographic free-for-all.

It may feel like a shock to find a third party inserting itself between you and a website, apparently demanding to know who you are, but it shouldn’t be a surprise: it’s eight years since the UK Government published its online harms green paper under Theresa May, and The Telegraph launched its Duty of Care campaign the following year.

After much wrangling, the result was the 2023 Online Safety Act. In March, the first part of went into effect, placing new obligations on platforms to remove content that is legal, but harmful to children: suicide advice, eating disorders or dangerous stunt challenges.

The second phase went into force last week, requiring age checks for pornography sites.

“Companies have effectively been treating all users as if they’re adults, leaving children potentially exposed to porn and other types of harmful content,” wrote Melanie Dawes, Ofcom’s chief executive, in January.

The UK is not an outlier in its desire to keep children safe, either. Texas and three other US states require age verification for adult material, and so will Australia.

But critics of the law have warned of consequences for free expression from the start, and over-zealous interpretations quickly became apparent.

X, previously Twitter, has already put material behind the age gate, with Benjamin Jones, director of case management at the Free Speech Union – of which I am a member – identifying a number of posts which were worryingly censored for unverified users.

Some supported calls for single-sex spaces for women. One by Wuhan lab researcher Billy Bostickson (a pseudonym) fell foul too; it was part of a thread on the use of bamboo RNA in vaccines.

Several posts in a thread discussing Richard the Lionheart were gated, which merely contained a reference to the crusades.

Most troublingly, a post linking to a live stream of police arrests at a demonstration at a migrant hotel in Leeds was also taken down. All these bans appear to have been the work of an over-zealous algorithm.

Some saw this coming. Baroness Claire Fox has written of her dismay at realising how outnumbered speech advocates were when she was in a room as the only free speech advocate, alongside dozens of groups all requesting some clause or addition.

“Only two of us [peers] consistently opposed the bill – myself and Lord Daniel Moylan. I was shocked that so many from the free speech camp of peers were silent,” Fox tells me.

“It became a Christmas tree bill with lots of other things put in it,” said Kemi Badenoch as she campaigned for the Conservative leadership last year. She also predicted “it will go after people who aren’t doing anything wrong”.

That hasn’t quite happened yet, but long overdue moves to enforce accountability on giant, transnational platforms, and better protect children unfortunately coincided with a renewed desire to control political speech.

The good state must take an active role in removing inflammatory speech, the United Nations declared in its 2021 paper Our Common Agenda. It re-emphasised the point last year.

William Perrin, one of the architects of Ofcom’s approach to regulating online platforms, who was not involved in drafting the legislation, recently posted a paper for the think tank Demos called Epistemic Security 2029: Protecting the UK’s information supply chains and strengthening discourse for the next political era. It explicitly calls for the policing of social media platforms.

One gets the sense that as long as populists are rising, the impulse to censor will be irresistible to their political opponents. By controlling our discourse, they can control democracy.

“We have an establishment that is innately hostile to Free Speech,” Jones of the Free Speech Union tells me.

Worth reading in full.

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Westfieldmike
Westfieldmike
8 months ago

You don’t day Sherlock, we never saw this coming did we? Agenda 2030 ramps up, they are determined.

transmissionofflame
8 months ago

“Companies have effectively been treating all users as if they’re adults, leaving children potentially exposed to porn and other types of harmful content,” wrote Melanie Dawes, Ofcom’s chief executive, in January.”

Or really – Companies have been assuming that parents supervise their children, leaving parents to decide how they bring their children up and what they can and cannot see.

Crosby
Crosby
8 months ago

Labour has been suppressing a full examination of the grooming gang scandal for years and still at local level this desperate effort continues to avoid being fingered for shying away from prosecuting the perpetrators, as the Casey Report definitively shows. How weird therefore that the Labour ‘minister for science’ smears Farage for his criticism of this catch all Bill – Labour does not want sex abusers prosecuted, Jimmy Savil would have been exculpated by their northern mafia.

huxleypiggles
8 months ago
Reply to  Crosby

Can we call the Rape Gangs by their real name : Pakistani Rape Gangs?

Thanks.

NeilParkin
8 months ago
Reply to  huxleypiggles

as they say on the BBC….other types of Rape Gang are also available.

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
8 months ago

Censorship has also been effectively imposed by the internet search engines.
I remember many years ago, during the MMR vaccine debate, I tried to find out what the anti-vax people were saying.
I felt neutral about the subject, but curious. What have these people got to say? – I wondered.
So I did a google search.
Nothing, absolutely nothing came up.
Every single link was to a pro-vaccine website.
So the overall result of the search was: “you are not allowed to know what these people are saying but they are definitely wrong!”
That was an eye opener.
Look, I’m not a conspiracy theorist.
I don’t think the moon landings were faked.
I think Diana died in a car crash.
I don’t think the earth is flat.
But why can’t I be trusted to make up my mind?

Sparrowhawk
8 months ago
Reply to  MajorMajor

Because you wish to know the Truth, and we are now living in what President Putin has called the “Empire of Lies”.
He was pulling his punches of course; what he should have said is the “Empire of Lies and Censorship“.

“The West, which once declared such principles of democracy as freedom of speech, pluralism and respect for dissenting opinions, has now degenerated into the opposite: totalitarianism. This includes censorship, media bans, and the arbitrary treatment of journalists and public figures…they are trying to impose this model, a model of totalitarian liberalism, including the notorious cancel culture of widespread bans.”

http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/68836

MajorMajor
MajorMajor
8 months ago
Reply to  Sparrowhawk

Vladimir’s assessment is correct; however, what he is saying is true of Russia too.

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
8 months ago

I think it would be relatively easy to design parental control into mobile phones, if it is not there already when a parent buys a child a telephone they can then put a password protected option to disallow certain activities.Computer can already be controlled and as Nigel Farage said there are many high tech people out there who could very easily sort this problem out. Instead these politicians are using this as a means to suppress and control the population.

Mogwai
8 months ago
Reply to  Bill Bailey

If it were really about safety they’d be putting their energies into making sure the streets are safer and tackling actual crime which poses a real threat to the public, not fretting about people stumbling upon some ‘inappropriate content’. The increase in crime and the pitiful solve rate says it all. They’d much rather crack down on free speech than serious crimes that threaten everybody in their day to day lives; ”Knife offences in London have increased by 86 per cent in a decade, a shocking report has found. London’s iconic West End has more knife crime than almost 15 per cent of the rest of the capital combined, according to research from the Policy Exchange. Just five per cent of robberies and 0.6 per cent of ‘theft from person’ crimes in London were solved last year, the research – titled Your Money or Your Life: London’s Knife Crime, Robbery and Street Theft Epidemic’ – found. The report’s author, ex-Scotland Yard detective chief inspector David Spencer, said his former force must take an unequivocal ‘crime fighting first’ approach to save the city from a knife, robbery and theft epidemic. Knife offences across the country have increased by 78 per cent since 2014, but… Read more »

Bill Bailey
Bill Bailey
8 months ago
Reply to  Mogwai

I could not agree more.

Myra
8 months ago
Reply to  Bill Bailey

Reminded me of the time when I put parental controls on the kids’ computer.
It immediately blocked the maths homework sent from their school…..

Andy A
8 months ago

Vpn, set to an overseas territory, and voila! All this censorship bypassed. Every teenager will know this. I wonder how much money the British Taxpayer ‘invested’ in this?

NeilParkin
8 months ago
Reply to  Andy A

Its a nitwits solution to a buggers muddle. Can we be reminded that this awful bill was just languishing in someone’s desk draw waiting for opportunity to be imposed.? The opportunity was poor David Amess’s brutal death. They said this would help, would solve the problems. I expected something about stabbiness, but instead they decided we just shouldn’t talk about it. Yet clearly, despite the scrutiny of the HoC, they demonstrate their failure to grasp the first thing about the internet, and about human nature.

Mogwai
8 months ago

It was always completely transparent what they were aiming for, and especially if Labour ban VPNs, there’s your irrefutable proof this is nothing whatsoever to do with safety and everything to do with control and authoritarianism; ”As it turns out, it’s not just perverts, cyberbullies, and assorted ne’er-do-wells who benefit from the internet remaining a free and open place. Last Friday, the British public was confronted with the realities of the Online Safety Act. Websites are now required to verify that all UK users are over 18 years old before allowing them to see any sort of age-restricted or potentially harmful content. This applies to porn sites as well as those selling nicotine or alcohol. But the act also covers any platform that hosts user-generated content, such as X, Facebook, and Reddit. Users have complained about having to upload scans of their ID or bank details, or have their faces scanned by AI in order to access pages that discuss anything remotely controversial or Not Safe For Work. The vast majority of this verification will be done by third-party providers.  Almost immediately, Brits online found a workaround in the form of VPNs, which mask a user’s IP address and can… Read more »

shonesd
shonesd
8 months ago

If only for this reason (and there are many others) the infiltrated “Conservative” Party is dead. Its zombie needs to be dealt with as soon as possible so that there can be a genuine voice for the conservative majority in Britain.

JDee
JDee
8 months ago

Of course it doesn’t work anyway, unless parental controls are properly managed by parents. You can still see all sorts of weird stuff with a general image search with your browser VPN or not. So unsupervised kids aren’t protected anyway.

NeilParkin
8 months ago

I would be more convinced by the ‘but what about the children.?’ rhetoric if we weren’t going out of our way to teach them about anal intercourse by the age of 7, in their classrooms.