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#Ofcom

2 posts2 participants0 posts today

“I’ve just closed the forum of a small classic car club because we don’t have the time or capacity to ensure compliance with only volunteers. Meta will benefit, because we will, reluctantly, move to using a Facebook page”
alecmuffett.com/article/112834
#OnlineSafetyAct #ofcom

image text: Quoth @ColinPoynter:




https://twitter.com/ColinPoynter/status/1902038092090859694
Dropsafe · “I’ve just closed the forum of a small classic car club because we don’t have the time or capacity to ensure compliance with only volunteers. Meta will benefit, because we will, reluctantly, move to using a Facebook page”
More from alecm

“There is something deeply wrong when a law passed with cross-party consensus & endorsed by Britain’s most trusted charities has made it impossible to run an internet forum for hamster owners”

Quoting @Sam_Dumitriu:

I forgot to say that every major newspaper was also in favour and the main opposition in Parliament was “It doesn’t go far enough.”

https://twitter.com/Sam_Dumitriu/status/1901950022477832384

X (formerly Twitter)Sam Dumitriu (@Sam_Dumitriu) on XI forgot to say that every major newspaper was also in favour and the main opposition in Parliament was "It doesn't go far enough."

#Ofcom launches investigation into #GBNews over #LGBTQ+ slur goodlawproject.org/ofcom-launc #GoodLawProject "launched an online tool helping the public make a complaint to Ofcom about this latest example of GB News platforming toxic rhetoric. A record 71,582 people filed complaints in this way – almost 17,000 more than the 54,595 who complained about Piers Morgan in 2021."

Good Law Project · Ofcom launches investigation into GB News over LGBTQ+ slur | Good Law ProjectBroadcast that received more than 70,000 complaints over a lie linking the LGBTQ+ community to paedophilia will be subject to a formal investigation.

The UK Online Safety Act comes into effect today.

Its onerous duties may cause many small sites, blogs and fedi instances to shut down or geoblock UK users when faced with potential fines and penalties.

This won't keep children safe. It'll benefit large platforms like Facebook and X that are laying waste to content moderation.

theregister.com/2025/01/14/onl

The Register · It's not just Big Tech: The UK's Online Safety Act applies across the boardBy Lindsay Clark

Great read

"The Online Safety Act reads to me as a profoundly ironic tragedy. #Ofcom constantly reiterates that huge, vague swaths of expression are “illegal, harmful content” while, to me, almost everything they’ve written about the #OSA is illegal, harmful content. The OSA exercises prior restraint and enables jawboning for a deliberate chilling effect, placing an undue burden that would never withstand strict scrutiny let alone justify unreasonable search and seizure"
lobste.rs/s/ukosa1/uk_users_lo

lobste.rsUK Users: Lobsters needs your help with the Online Safety Act | Lobsters

The Online Safety Deadline has passed | @Cyberleagle / Graham Smith

Today [Sunday] is the day by which an estimated 25,000 UK & 75,000 non-UK illegal harms risk assessments should have been completed. I wonder what proportion have

(a) done it

(b) geoblocked the UK

(c) closed down altogether

(d) none of the above.

https://x.com/Cyberleagle/status/1901321320698187943

X (formerly Twitter)Graham Smith  (@Cyberleagle) on XToday is the day by which an estimated 25,000 UK and 75,000 non-UK illegal harms risk assessments should have been completed. I wonder what proportion have (a) done it (b) geoblocked the UK (c) closed down altogether (d) none of the above. #OnlineSafetyAct
Continued thread

When it comes to blogs, Ofcom says one thing, the UK Online Safety Act says another.

This lack of clarity over whether blogs with comments are exempt will push small sites to shut down completely.

We need the UK government to tighten up the definitions and exemptions in the Act.

Read our explainer for more detail ➡️ openrightsgroup.org/blog/save-

Open Rights GroupSave our Sites: Deadline 17 MarchIncredible as it may seem, thanks to the Online Safety Act, dozens of harmless, safe, small websites are closing down by 17 March, rather than face threats of fines that could lose their operators their homes.
Continued thread

Under the UK Online Safety Act, small blogs, forums and fedi instances are faced with disproportionate requirements to:

⚫️ Check if they have UK users

⚫️ Do a risk assessment on whether kids might access the content, or if CSAM or terrorist material might be posted in the comments

⚫️ Put themselves at the risk of fines, and even prison sentences, if they fail to comply with Ofcom’s future directives

#SaveOurSites 🌐