Christopher Hutton is a technology reporter for the Washington Examiner covering Big Tech companies like Facebook and X as well as the regulatory efforts by Washington to rein in the tech companies. He previously wrote for a number of other outlets, including Daily Dot, Pando Daily, Religion Unplugged, and other outlets.
The United Kingdom has turned one of its wide-ranging pieces of legislation regulating how Big Tech firms manage privacy and youth access to the internet into law.
Online platforms will have some time to abide by the demands of the OSB. Ofcom, the U.K. telecoms regulator, intends to publish its rules in three phases. The first phase will deal with how platforms should handle terrorism and child-sexual-abuse-related content and will release rules in late 2024. The second phase will focus on child safety and will release rules around verifying users' age before allowing access to pornography and see the release of rules in 2025.
The Online Safety Bill has been a contentious piece of legislation, with several public websites pushing back on it. Encrypted app developers like WhatsApp and Signal objected to clauses that they claim would undermine their end-to-end encryption practice in an effort to combat pornographic content. The apps have threatened to leave the U.K. if the bill forces them to undermine their encryption practices.
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