Thank you for contacting my office. I very much appreciate you getting in touch about internet regulation.
This is an issue I care passionately about. In April, I was in Strasbourg to attend the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (CoE). I spoke in a debate on how we can work with our global partners to combat children's exposure to pornographic content.
You can find my full speech below, between 2:32:31 and 2:35:36
https://vodmanager.coe.int/.../web.../coe/2022-04-25-1/en/24
Often a force for good, the internet can also be misused; we
cannot ignore the very real harms people face online every day. The Queen’s
Speech included the Online Safety Bill which will introduce ground-breaking
laws to protect children online and tackle the worst abuses on social media,
including racist hate crimes.
Digital Secretary Nadine Dorries
has also prioritised additional illegal offences to be written on the face
of the Bill. This removes the need for them to be set out in secondary
legislation, allowing faster enforcement action against tech firms which fail
to remove the named illegal content. These offences include but are not limited
to: revenge porn; hate crime; fraud; weapons offences; the promotion or
facilitation of suicide; people smuggling; and incitement to and threats of
violence.
A recent strengthening of the
proposed legislation will mean that firms must remove harmful content that has
been reported to them and must prevent people being exposed to it in the first
place. Ofcom, the UK’s independent communications regulator, will oversee the
regulatory regime, backed up by mandatory reporting requirements and strong
enforcement powers to deal with non-compliance. These powers include
issuing fines of up to ten per cent of annual worldwide turnover to
non-compliant sites or blocking them from being accessible in the UK.
I know that the Government has
acted on recommendations set out by the Law Commission in its report on harmful
online communications. New provisions include the introduction of a harm-based
communications offence and an offence for when a person sends a communication
they know to be false with the intention to inflict harm. Furthermore, I
welcome the decision to create a new cyberflashing offence with
perpetrators facing up to two years behind bars. I understand that the
Government is also considering the report’s recommendations on specific
offences relating to epilepsy trolling.
More broadly, I am encouraged that
this Bill delivers on the manifesto commitment to make the UK the safest place
in the world to be online by improving protections for users, especially
children, whilst protecting freedom of expression.
Once
again, thank you for taking the time to write. If you require any further
assistance, then please do not hesitate to get in touch.
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