Kentish Express Ashford & District

Big step forward on protection of children

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The NSPCC has been calling for legislatio­n to protect children from grooming, abuse and harmful content online, since 2017.

After years of the charity campaignin­g, on December 15, the Government announced the framework for a future

Online Harms Bill that has the potential to provide much greater protection for children when they use the internet.

This is a landmark moment - a major step towards legislatio­n that can make an enforceabl­e legal Duty of Care on tech companies a reality. For too long children have been exposed to disgracefu­l abuse and harm online.

Social media companies will have a duty to protect young users from child abuse and harmful content online and face fines of up to £18million or 10% of their global turnover if they fail.

But that doesn’t mean that the work we do stops now. For instance, the proposals fall short of ensuring criminal sanctions against named directors whose companies fail to uphold their Duty of Care.

Child protection and children’s voices must remain front and centre of regulatory requiremen­ts. We have set out six tests for robust regulation – including action to tackle both online sexual abuse and harmful content and a regulator with the power to investigat­e and hold tech firms to account with criminal and financial sanctions. Failing to pass any of the six tests will mean that future generation­s of children will pay with serious avoidable harm and sexual abuse.

We will now be closely scrutinisi­ng the proposals against those tests. Above all, legislatio­n must ensure Ofcom has the power and resources to enforce the Duty of Care and be able to identify and then take appropriat­e action against tech firms that fail.

For more informatio­n, search ‘NSPCC six tests’.

Anna Collishaw-Nikodemus Campaigns manager, NSPCC

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