Comment on How the American war on porn could change the way you use the internet

tal@lemmy.today ⁨3⁩ ⁨months⁩ ago

How the American war on porn could change the wat you use the internet

looks slightly annoyed

I’m not particularly enthusiastic about such state laws, but the UK spent the last several years having committed to mandate age verification itself prior to eventually abandoning it, and I didn’t see Voice of America trying to get people in the US riled up about British law.

en.wikipedia.org/…/Proposed_UK_Internet_age_verif…

And if I recall, they had some follow-up effort, which I assume is what is briefly referenced in the article.

looks

Yeah.

…org.uk/…/guidance-service-providers-pornographic…

Implementing the Online Safety Act: Protecting children from online pornography

This is the second of four major consultations that Ofcom, as the appointed online safety regulator, will publish as part of our work to establish the new regulations under the Online Safety Act (2023).

Currently, services publishing pornographic content online do not have sufficient measures in place to prevent children from accessing this content. Many grant children access to pornographic content without age checks, or by relying on checks that only require the user to confirm that they are over the age of 18.

The Online Safety Act is clear that service providers publishing pornographic content online must implement age assurance which is highly effective at correctly determining whether or not a user is a child to prevent children from normally encountering their online pornographic content.

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