March 06, 2020 |
Australia Moves a Step Closer to Blocking Porn Online Nationwide |
Despite the farcical attempt by the United Kingdom to put in place an âage-verificationâ law blocking online porn sitesâa law that was never implemented and finally cancelled after three years and the equivalent of $2.5 millionâAustralia is now trying to do the same thing.On Thursday, a parliamentary committee issued a report calling for a âroadmapâ toward the goal of blocking all porn sites to anyone under 18, sometime within the next 12 months, according to The Guardian newspaper. According to the Guardian summary of the report, Australia hopes to avoid some of the problems that plagued the U.K. effort by verifying ages though âan exchange hosted by the governmentâ rather than through technology implemented by individual sites, as would have been required in the British system. Andrew Wallace, chair of the Standing Committee on Social Policy and Legal Affairs, which issued the report titled âProtecting the Age of Innocence,â admitted that many users would find ways around the age verification system, and that it would likely miss porn that appears on social media sites such as Twitter, and in Google search results.âWe must not let the perfect be the enemy of the good,â Wallace said.The report acknowledged that three âcrucial factorsâ would need to be addressed to avoid the failures of the U.K. attempt at putting an age verification system in place.Those factors, according to the report, are âensuring there is a level playing field in terms of regulation; ensuring age verification is both robust and easy for consumers to use; and raising public awareness of age verification, so that consumers understand that age verification is a child protection measure and so that they trust and understand how to use age-verification systems in place.âThe report also acknowledged that Australians who might want to watch porn online may feel uncomfortable giving their personal information to the government. But no worriesâthe committeeâs report recommended that there will be only a minimal amount of data retained, and that âit must be stored in a secure way.âPhoto by Owen65 / Wikimedia Commons
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