Internet Matters
Search

Internet Matters’ submission to the Public Bill Committee for the Online Safety Bill

Simone Vibert | 26th May, 2022
See our response to the Online Safety Bill

While Internet Matters welcomes the development of the Online Safety Bill, we believe it could be significantly strengthened to better serve the needs of young people and families. See our response below.

About this submission

Internet Matters has long supported the need for greater regulation of online services, alongside education for parents and carers, to improve children’s experiences of digital life. The Online Safety Bill is a welcome development and we support its guiding aim to make the UK the safest place to be online, along with many of its specific provisions and measures.

Our submission is therefore limited in discussion to a single area where we believe the Bill could be significantly strengthened and therefore better serve the needs of young people and families. This area is the Bill’s treatment of content which is legal but harmful to children.

The challenges with the current definition

The Bill addresses three kinds of content which is legal but harmful to children:

It is important that (3) is worded in such a way that it captures the full range of harmful content which children and young people may encounter online, as it is likely that only a limited number of content-types will be designated “primary priority” or “priority content”. But in its current form, Internet Matters is concerned that (3) could fail to capture the full range of harms.

Supporting resources

Get personalised advice and ongoing support

The first step to ensure your child’s online safety is getting the right guidance. We’ve made it easy with ‘My Family’s Digital Toolkit.’