BRITS are finding worrying ways to get around strict new rules that block users from accessing porn sites unless they show ID.
A long-awaited new law came into effect at midnight, forcing people to prove they’re over 18 by sharing an ID document or scanning their face with a camera.
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The sweeping changes affect websites showing porn, or anything linked to self-harm, suicide, or eating disorders – as well as social media apps showing such content.
Websites that fail to implement tougher age checks face being blocked from view in the UK or being hit with hefty fines.
The Online Safety Act is designed to protect children from harmful material and will be enforced by the regulator Ofcom.
But many claim it’s “easily exploitable”.
It’s a “non issue for anyone with the most minimal of computing knowledge” one person wrote on Reddit.
Others fear that the move could inadvertently push people to far dodgier websites.
Ofcom admits there’s no way to stop people using VPNs to get around the block.
“Our research shows that these are not people that are out to find porn – it’s being served up to them in their feeds,” Oliver Griffiths, group director for online safety at Ofcom told The Sun.
“And we think that these measures are going to have a really big impact in terms of dealing with that particular problem.
“There will be teenagers – dedicated teenagers – who want to find their way to porn, in the same way as people find ways to buy alcohol under 18. They will use VPNs.
“And actually, I think there’s a really important reflection here. It’s not just us, in terms of making life safer online.
“Parents having a view in terms of whether their kids have got a VPN, and using parental controls and having conversations, feels a really important part of the solution.”
Technology Secretary Peter Kyle said a generation of children will not be allowed to grow up “at the mercy of toxic algorithms” and warned tech firms “will be held to account” if they fail to act in line with the changes.
He told Sky News: “I have very high expectations of the change that children will experience.
“And let me just say this to parents and children, you will experience a different internet really, for the first time in from today, moving forward than you’ve had in the past. And that is a big step forward.”
Children’s charities the NSPCC and Barnardo’s are among those who have welcomed the new checks, as well as the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) which hunts and takes down online child abuse material.
Meanwhile, a petition with more than 65,000 signatures at the time of publishing is calling for the law to be reversed, arguing the shake-up is “far broader and restrictive than is necessary in a free society”.
THE SHOCKING STATS
Latest figures show the scale of adult content consumption online…
Ofcom stats:
- Around 8% children aged 8-14 in the UK visited an online porn site or app in a month.
- 15% of 13–14-year-olds accessed online porn in a month.
- Boys aged 13-14 are the most likely to visit a porn service, significantly more than girls the same age (19% vs 11%).
- Our research tells us that around three in ten (29%) or 13.8m UK adults use porn online.
- Pornhub is the most used site in the UK – Ofcom research says 18% (8.4m) visited it in one month.
Children’s Commissioner stats:
Of the 64% who said that they had ever seen online pornography:
- The average age at which children first see pornography is 13. By age nine, 10% had seen pornography, 27% had seen it by age 11 and half of children who had seen pornography had seen it by age 13.
- We also find that young people are frequently exposed to violent pornography, depicting coercive, degrading or pain-inducing sex acts; 79% had encountered violent pornography before the age of 18.
- Pornography is not confined to dedicated adult sites. We found that Twitter was the online platform where young people were most likely to have seen pornography.