UK Parliament / Open data

Online Safety Bill

Proceeding contribution from Lord Bethell (Conservative) in the House of Lords on Monday, 10 July 2023. It occurred during Debate on bills on Online Safety Bill.

My Lords, I rise emphatically to welcome the government amendments in this group. They are a thoughtful and fulsome answer to the serious concerns expressed from the four corners of the Chamber by a great many noble Lords at Second Reading and in Committee about the treatment of age verification for pornography and online harms. For this, I express my profound thanks to my noble friend the Minister, the Secretary of State, the Bill team, the Ofcom officials and all those who have worked so hard to refine this important Bill. This is a moment when the legislative team has clearly listened and done everything it possibly can to close the gap. It is very much the House of Lords at its best.

It is worth mentioning the exceptionally broad alliance of noble Lords who have worked so hard on this issue, particularly my compadres, my noble friend Lady Harding, the noble Baroness, Lady Kidron, and the right reverend Prelate the Bishop of Oxford, who all signed many of the draft amendments. There are the Front-Benchers, including the noble Lords, Lord Stevenson, Lord Knight, Lord Clement-Jones and Lord Allan of Hallam, and the noble Baroness, Lady Merron. There are the Back-Benchers behind me, including my noble friends Lady Jenkin and Lord Farmer, the noble Lords, Lord Morrow, Lord Browne and Lord Dodds, and the noble Baroness, Lady Foster. Of those in front of me, there are the noble Baronesses, Lady Benjamin and Lady Ritchie, and there is also a number too large for me to mention, from all across the House.

I very much welcome the sense of pragmatism and proportionality at the heart of the Online Safety Bill. I welcome the central use of risk assessment as a vital tool for policy implementation and the recognition that some harms are worse than others, that some children need more protection than others, that we are legislating for future technologies that we do not know much about and that we must engage industry to achieve effective implementation. As a veteran of the Communications Act 2003, I strongly support the need for enabling legislation that has agility and a broad amount of support to stand the test of time.

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However, there is also a time when it is essential that we are absolute about things and that we say that there are some contents and functions that children should never encounter anywhere on the internet. If we want to be taken seriously as a Parliament, and if we want to bring about meaningful behavioural change, we need to tether the regulation of the internet to at least some certainties, and that is why this package of government amendments is so very welcome. We need to make it clear to anyone doing business on the internet that, sometimes, there are no loopholes, no mitigations, no legal cop-outs, no consultations and no sliding scales. Sometimes Parliament makes choices and decides that some things are just plain wrong and beyond the pale.

It was the moral relativism and misguided sense of proportionality and consultative handling, when it came to the age verification measures for damaging and violent pornography, that so alarmed so many people about the draft Bill. It is very much the clarity of the newly introduced government amendments that make them so powerful. They make it crystal clear that no child should ever see any pornography anywhere on the internet. That is a massive relief to those who have campaigned so hard and for so long for final age verification for pornography and priority harms. On this, I am particularly thankful to the noble Baroness, Lady Benjamin, who I know is seething with frustration that she is not speaking, and to my noble friend Lord Farmer. By introducing clear, concrete and definitive measures, this government package provides a tether that anchors the Bill to some certainty.

The government amendments are an essential step to ending the corrosive sense of exceptionalism that has hung around the regulation of online spaces for too long. We will no longer consult with industry about what it might or might not be expected to do to protect children, as was first intended. Instead, we are defining a high bar and applying it to all pornographic content and priority harms, wherever they are on the internet, the metaverse or any future technology. We are legislating for all online businesses, wherever they are, and whether they are big, small, mobile, meta or whatever.

Thank goodness that our Government have recognised that we have reached an inflection point in the history of the online world, where the access to internet content and functions are in the pockets and bedrooms of our children. We should no longer victim-blame our children by calling for more education; we cannot scapegoat parents by making implausible expectations

about how families can police or manage their children’s times on devices. Instead, with these amendments, the Government have recognised that we need internet companies to take responsibility for what is on their platforms; there will be no more dodging or obfuscation. If you have horrible, violent porn content on your service, you need a system to keep children away—full stop; no haggling.

This is a profound challenge to Twitter, Instagram, Snapchat, TikTok, WhatsApp, Reddit, Facebook and all the services that the Children’s Commissioner rightly identified as gateways to pornography: businesses that have, for too long, happily recruited kids to their algorithms with porn and have taken advertisers’ money for clicks from kids watching porn, regardless of the consequences to society. This is also a challenge to Pornhub and all the other professional pornographers that have benefited from the constructive ambiguity of the last 30 years and will now be called to account.

This is a huge victory. My noble friend Lord Grade thoughtfully and movingly told us that he would judge Ofcom’s mission to be a success if platforms finally took responsibility for what was on their services, and I take that very seriously. The government amendments in this group provide a powerful illustration of that principle and a tool for bringing it about. Effective enforcement by Ofcom is essential for giving tech bosses, who are too often happy to pay the fines and move on, a certain clarity of mind. I welcome the government amendments on senior management liability, which introduce the threat of prison to those who egregiously breach Ofcom’s standards. However, as the House knows, several enforcement measures are yet to reach us, and I flag in advance to my noble friend the Minister that these are considered critical to the success of the new regime by several noble Lords.

The government amendments are a massive step towards applying the common-sense principle that the rules about what is illegal and inappropriate for children in the real world should be applied equally to the online world, with equal vigour and equal scope. For that reason, I very much welcome the announcement of a porn review to investigate gaps in UK regulation that allow exploitation or abuse to occur online, in clear breach of long-standing criminal and civil laws, and to identify barriers to enforcing criminal law.

This is a knotty issue that involves several cross-departmental dependencies, including the allocation of resources by the Home Office, the writing of proper guidelines by the Ministry of Justice, the prioritisation of prosecutions by the CPS, and the building of a relevant skills base in our police forces. I therefore ask the Minister for guidance on the timetable, the terms of reference and the appointment of a chair for this review. I would also ask that a wide range of voices are heard and prioritised for this review.

The Government deserve considerable praise for their bold steps: not just to protect children from the harms of pornography, and to put Britain at the forefront of the global response to online safety, but also to nurture a benign environment for our critically important tech sector. These government amendments will create legislative certainty: an essential foundation for innovation. They will help rehabilitate the reputation

of a tech sector reeling from the excesses of bad actors and the misplaced moral relativism of this young, exciting and vibrant industry. That will have benign consequences for investment and recruitment.

With a final word of optimism, I ask my noble friend the Minister what work will be done to bring alignment with other jurisdictions and to promote Britain as a well-regulated destination for investment, much as we do for life sciences.

About this proceeding contribution

Reference

831 cc1529-1532 

Session

2022-23

Chamber / Committee

House of Lords chamber
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