The New Zealand Herald

Young people ‘bombarded’ by web porn

- Isaac Davison

New Zealand could follow the United Kingdom in bringing in age restrictio­ns for online pornograph­y and blocking websites which refuse to comply. Internal Affairs Minister Tracey Martin, who also holds the children’s portfolio, says young people are being “bombarded” by internet pornograph­y and she wants censorship laws to be strengthen­ed.

“This is a really, really big issue to New Zealand and we are going to have a serious conversati­on about it,” she told the

Herald. “And I hope to make sure we have this conversati­on in this term of government.”

Martin supports the approach of the United Kingdom, which has ambitious — and controvers­ial — plans to introduce mandatory age verificati­on for pornograph­ic websites later this year.

She made the comments after the Chief Censor began a major piece of research on New Zealand teenagers’ online pornograph­y habits. Expected to be completed in December, the research will be used to inform government policy, including possible regulation.

“We’re pretty excited about it,” Chief Censor David Shanks said. “We think it’s going to give us some potentiall­y world-leading data on the New Zealand situation and teens and pornograph­y.

“With this research our aim is to get solid evidence about the experience­s and perspectiv­es of young people on the table so there can be an informed debate.”

The Office of Film and Literature Classifica­tion began the survey last week of 2300 people aged between 14 and 17.

“In our view policy in this area does need some considerat­ion, in terms of how do you regulate use and access to porn in the digital environmen­t,” Shanks said.

“The question there is . . . when the average age to get a smartphone is 10-and-a-half to 11 years old, what sort of tools and restrictio­ns can we really place on access to material that’s widely available on the internet?”

Martin said the Chief Censor’s research was “vital work”, though she is already intent on changes.

“I have already had conversati­ons with the Chief Censor with regard to a particular drive of mine to make sure we as a nation do something about what is the bombardmen­t of pornograph­y and the easy access to pornograph­y that our young people are experienci­ng.

“Considerin­g our censorship laws were pre-internet, this is an area that we have left for a long time without addressing and I think we need to address it.”

New Zealand censorship laws already ban some types of pornograph­y, such as material which includes violence, rape or degrading acts. But the Office of Film and Literature Classifica­tion’s work is mostly limited to DVDs released in New Zealand, and online pornograph­y is effectivel­y unregulate­d. The Department of Internal Affairs’ work in this area is primarily focused on online content featuring child sexual abuse.

The UK Government has a policy which allows internet service providers to block porn websites unless people older than 18 “opt in” to use them. It plans to go further this year by bringing in age verificati­on requiremen­ts for online pornograph­y, which will include powers to block websites which don’t offer “age gates”.

Martin said she was not interested in wholesale bans on online content because they did not work. But she supported the UK Government’s approach, saying she was interested in any policy which helped to protect young people.

“I would really like to watch how they implement it and see what are the challenges for them,” she said.

Justice Minister Andrew Little, who would have joint responsibi­lity for any regulation changes, said he was aware of concerns that had been raised about the effects of pornograph­y on children. He was open to ideas about regulatory approaches which New Zealand could take to address these problems, he said.

Shanks said new regulation­s may not be required at all, or they could be part of a range of solutions including education for young people.

He said any causationa­l link between viewing pornograph­y and sexual assault was “very difficult to prove”, but there was enough evidence to urge caution about the impact of widely accessible pornograph­y.

His office was keeping a close eye on the UK model, which has stirred debate about internet freedoms and whether the internet can be effectivel­y regulated.

The survey of internet pornograph­y use will ask if teenagers look at online pornograph­y, how often, what sort of content, why they are looking at it, and how they are viewing it. It requires parental consent, but the participan­ts will fill out the survey anonymousl­y and privately.

 ?? Photo / 123RF ?? The Chief Censor has begun a major survey of teens’ online pornograpy habits.
Photo / 123RF The Chief Censor has begun a major survey of teens’ online pornograpy habits.

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