A Look at the Online Safety Bill and How It Might Affect Privacy in the UK

Share This Post

What Is the Online Safety Bill and How It Might Break Encryption in the UK?

The Online Safety Bill, a piece of legislation that seeks assurances to keep some sites free of illegal and harmful content for U.K. jurisdiction, is facing opposition from tech and messaging giants due to its possible effects on privacy and encryption. The bill introduces clauses allowing the government to force messaging companies to scan user messages looking for harmful or dangerous content.

Online Safety Bill: Focus and Objectives

The Online Safety Bill is a piece of legislation currency being discussed in the House of the Lords, the upper house of the U.K. Parliament, that seeks to make the internet safer by establishing a new set of rules that will be enforced by Ofcom, the U.K, telecommunications regulator.

The bill, which is currently in the final stages of its approval and is expected to be approved next week without significant changes, adds a new layer of duties for different communications service providers in the U.K., including the removal of probably harmful content by the platforms, and also the requirement of age assurance for some sites.

Also, it introduces new crimes, including sending fake communications, threatening communications, and content to cause seizures. In the same way, the regulation punishes the sharing of intimate content without consent, determining criminal penalties for companies and individuals who fail to comply.

Controversy and the ‘Spy Clause’

One of the most significant controversies surrounding the implementation of this bill as it is proposed is the existence of a so-called “spy clause” that would give Ofcom the faculty to scan the data of users of messaging platforms to look for any harmful content. This has sparked massive opposition from different groups that state this might affect messaging platforms like Signal, Whatsapp, and others that use two-way encryption models to protect their users’ privacy.

These and other companies have stated in an open letter that the Online Safety Bill “poses an unprecedented threat to the privacy, safety, and security of every U.K. citizen and the people with whom they communicate around the world,” reinforcing that approving the bill as is could ” break end-to-end encryption, opening the door to routine, general and indiscriminate surveillance of personal messages of friends,”

While some have celebrated the latest rollback from the U.K. government, with Stephen Parkinson, the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Arts and Heritage, stating that Ofcom would not force tech platforms to scan messages unless it is “technically feasible and where technology has been accredited as meeting minimum standards of accuracy in detecting only child sexual abuse and exploitation content,” the “spy clause” remains in the final revisions of the document.

Pat Walshe, a data protection professional, stressed that even after these statements, “nothing has changed in the Online Safety Bill to prevent mass surveillance of people’s communications. Powers to compel companies remains.”

What do you think about the Online Safety Bill and its possible implications for companies serving U.K. customers? Tell us in the comments section below.

Read Entire Article
spot_img
- Advertisement -spot_img

Related Posts

Kenya Launches Digital and AI Skills Center

Kenya, in partnership with the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and Microsoft, has established the Africa Centre of Competence for Digital and AI Skill This center aims to equip public

Blockchain Takes Root: USDA Approves Blockchain-Based Certification System

The US cattle industry is going blockchain Decentralized cow verification service, CattleProof’s “Verified,” has been approved, giving it the historic title as the United States

What Are Based Roll-Ups? A Beginner’s Guide

This piece is a guest post by Blocmates Blocmates is an invaluable crypto news and educational resource that offers clarity in the often complicated and jargon-filled crypto space In this article,

Crypto Hack Weekly Report: $36M Whale Loss, dETH Crash, and the FBI’s Market Manipulation Sting

The post Crypto Hack Weekly Report: $36M Whale Loss, dETH Crash, and the FBI’s Market Manipulation Sting appeared first on Coinpedia Fintech News Cryptocurrencies are extraordinarily dynamic

The Global Liquidity Cycle and Its Implications for Crypto

This editorial is from last week’s newsletter, Week in Review Subscribe to the newsletter to get this weekly editorial the second it’s finished, The newsletter also includes the biggest stories

Crypto Trader Loses $35 Million In Minutes – Here’s How

Blockchain security platform Scam Sniffer recently revealed a crypto trader who lost $35 million in minutes This trader is said to have lost this sum thanks to a social-engineered crypto scam, which