LONDON—In response to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s plans to eliminate provisions from the Online Safety Bill that compel high-risk online services to remove content that is “legal but harmful” to adults the Center for Data Innovation issued the following statement from Senior Policy Analyst Kir Nuthi:
I want to commend Prime Minister Sunak and his cabinet for committing to remove some of the worst provisions in the bill that would limit free expression. The requirements for certain online platforms to monitor and remove legal but harmful content were too broad and risked politicizing which content would be restricted in the UK. Removing this provision from the scope of the Online Safety Bill is a step toward protecting free expression.
Unfortunately, the Online Safety Bill still needs work. Until an amended Online Safety Bill protects encrypted communications, the Online Safety Bill will continue to be a broken piece of legislation. The Online Safety Bill needs to exclude encrypted communications and end-to-end encryption services to ensure UK users have a right to communicate using trusted, safe, and private channels online. Removing these protected communications from the scope of the bill will ensure the safety of vulnerable individuals who rely on these encrypted mediums to carry out journalism, activism, and other forms of work that bolster democracy, as well as the privacy of ordinary users.
For more on this issue, see the Center for Data Innovation’s report, which asked Parliament to better protect legal free expression:
- Kir Nuthi and Mella Tesfazgi, “Reforming the UK Online Safety Bill to Protect Legal Free Expression and Anonymity” (Center for Data Innovation, August 2022).