Tuesday, December 16, 2025
26.5 F
New York

Online safety laws unsatisfactory, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle says

UK laws on internet safety are “very uneven” and “unsatisfactory”, Technology Secretary Peter Kyle has said, following calls from campaigners to tighten the rules.

On Saturday, Ian Russell, the father of Molly Russell, who took her own life at 14 after seeing harmful content online, said the UK was “going backwards” on the issue.

In a letter to the PM, Mr Russell argued that the Online Safety Act, which aims to force tech giants to take more responsibility for their sites’ content, needed fixing and said a “duty of care” should be imposed on the firms.

Speaking to the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg, Kyle expressed his “frustration” with the Act, which was passed by the previous Conservative government in 2023.

The Conservative government had originally included in the legislation plans to compel social media companies to remove some “legal-but-harmful” content, such as posts promoting eating disorders.

However the proposal triggered a backlash from critics, including the current Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch, who were concerned it could lead to censorship.

In July 2022, Badenoch, who was not then a minister, said the bill was in “no fit state to become law” adding: “We should not be legislating for hurt feelings.”

Another Conservative MP, David Davis, said it risked “the biggest accidental curtailment of free speech in modern history”.

The plan was dropped for adult social media users and instead companies were required to give users more control to filter out content they did not want to see. The law still expects companies to protect children from legal-but-harmful content.

Kyle said the section on legal-but-harmful content had been taken out of the bill adding: “So I inherited a landscape where we have a very uneven, unsatisfactory legislative settlement.”

He did not commit to making changes to the current legislation but said he was “very open-minded” on the subject.

He also said the act contained some “very good powers” he was using to “assertively” tackle new safety concerns and that in the coming months ministers would get the powers to make sure online platforms were providing age-appropriate content.

Companies that did not comply with the law would face “very strident” sanctions, he said.

Following the interview, a Whitehall source told the BBC the government was not planning to repeal the Online Safety Act, or pass a second act, but to work within what ministers believe are its limitations.

Ministers are not ruling out further legislation but wanted “to be agile and quick” to keep up with fast-moving trends, a source said.

In his letter, Ian Russell argued that “ominous” changes in the tech industry put greater pressure on the government to act.

He said Mark Zuckerberg, the boss of Meta which owns Facebook and Instagram, and Elon Musk, owner of the social media site X, were “at the leading edge of a wholesale recalibration of the industry”.

He accused Zuckerberg of moving away from safety towards a “laissez-faire, anything-goes model” and “back towards the harmful content that Molly was exposed to”.

Earlier this week, Zuckerberg said Meta would be getting rid of fact checkers, and instead adopt a system – already introduced by X – of allowing users to add “community notes” to social media posts they deemed to be untrue.

This marked a change from Meta’s previous approach, introduced in 2016, whereby third party moderators would check posts on Facebook and Instagram that appeared to be false or misleading.

Content flagged as inaccurate would be moved lower in users’ feeds and accompanied by labels offering viewers more information on the subject.

Defending the new system, Zuckerberg said moderators were “too politically biased” and it was “time to get back to our roots around free expression”.

The step comes as Meta seeks to improve relations with incoming US President Donald Trump who has previously accused the company of censoring right-wing voices.

Zuckerberg said the change – which only applies in the US – would mean content moderators would “catch less bad stuff” but would also reduce the number of “innocent” posts being removed.

Responding to Russell’s criticism, a Meta spokesperson told the BBC there was “no change to how we treat content that encourages suicide, self-injury, and eating disorders” and said the company would “continue to use our automated systems to scan for that high-severity content”.

Asked about the change, Kyle said the announcement was “an American statement for American service users” adding: “There is one thing that has not changed and that is the law of this land.”

“If you come and operate in this country you abide by the law, and the law says illegal content must be taken down,” he said.

Rules in the Online Safety Act, due to come into force later this year, compel social media firms to show that they are removing illegal content – such as child sexual abuse, material inciting violence and posts promoting or facilitating suicide.

The law also says companies have to protect children from harmful material including pornography, material promoting self-harm, bullying and content encouraging dangerous stunts.

Platforms will be expected to adopt “age assurance technologies” to prevent children from seeing harmful content.

The law also requires companies to take action against illegal, state-sponsored disinformation. If their services are likely to be accessed by children they should also take steps to protect users against misinformation.

Hot this week

Stop avoiding your bank balance and other ways to manage your money better

BBC We've all looked at our bank account and wondered...

Railways: Firms develop new tech to electrify trains

'This is the big one' - tech firms bet...

UK targets 420m at sky high industry energy bills

£420m bill cut for heavy industry as union attacks...

Apple claims ‘tremendous’ global uptake of latest iPhones

Danielle KayeBusiness reporter Reuters Apple boss Tim Cook holds an iPhone...

Trump hails ‘amazing’ meeting with Xi in South Korea

Trump hails 'amazing' meeting with China's Xi but no...

Topics

Stop avoiding your bank balance and other ways to manage your money better

BBC We've all looked at our bank account and wondered...

Railways: Firms develop new tech to electrify trains

'This is the big one' - tech firms bet...

UK targets 420m at sky high industry energy bills

£420m bill cut for heavy industry as union attacks...

Apple claims ‘tremendous’ global uptake of latest iPhones

Danielle KayeBusiness reporter Reuters Apple boss Tim Cook holds an iPhone...

Trump hails ‘amazing’ meeting with Xi in South Korea

Trump hails 'amazing' meeting with China's Xi but no...

Ofcom slams O2 over unexpected mobile phone contract price rise

Imran Rahman-JonesTechnology reporter The UK's media regulator has criticised O2...

Virgin cleared to challenge Eurostar on Channel Tunnel route

Charlotte EdwardsBusiness reporter Virgin Trains has moved closer to being...

US and China’s different reports of their trade meeting

Skip to content British Broadcasting Corporation Home News Sport Business Innovation Culture Arts Travel Earth Audio Video Live More on this story. 23 hours...

Related Articles

Popular Categories