- home
- facet
- Online Safety Bill
Online Safety Bill
ai generated text
The Online Safety Act 2023 is a law passed by the UK Parliament on October 26, 2023, regulating online speech and media. It gives the Secretary of State the power to designate and suppress content deemed "harmful" and requires online platforms to scan for child pornography, despite concerns over user privacy. The act also creates a duty of care for online platforms, obliges them to preserve access to journalistic and democratic content, and grants significant powers to the secretary of state to direct Ofcom, the media regulator.learn more on wikipedia
US and UK fail to sign Paris summit declaration on inclusive AI
- 16
- 98
- 14
Elon Musk and Keir Starmer Engage in Heated Exchange Over Pakistani Grooming Gangs
- 20
- 89
- 18
Australia to implement a fine system for social media companies that fail to enforce the under-16s ban
- 3
- 14
- 8
UK Authorities Maintain High Alert Ahead of Weekend Protests Amid Fears of Renewed Violence
- 3
- 15
- 2
perspectives
- 1.Tech industry
- 2.Regulation
- 3.Immigration to the UK
- 4.France under Emmanuel Macron
- 5.French Economy
- 6.Artificial Intelligence
- 7.Multilateralism
- 8.Copyright
- 9.Privacy Rights
- 10.Datacenters
- 11.US-EU relations
- 12.UK under Keir Starmer
countries
- 1.United Kingdom
- 2.United States
- 3.Ukraine
- 4.Russian Federation
- 5.Romania
- 6.Pakistan
- 7.Germany
- 8.Australia
- 9.France
- 10.Sweden
- 11.Norway
- 12.Latvia
organizations
- 1.Labour Party
- 2.10 Downing Street
- 3.Alternative for Germany
- 4.Tesla
- 5.SpaceX
- 6.North Atlantic Treaty Organisation
- 7.TikTok
- 8.Crown Prosecution Service
- 9.Facebook
- 10.YouTube
- 11.xAI
- 12.World Trade Organization
persons
- 1.Keir Starmer
- 2.Olaf Scholz
- 3.Emmanuel Macron
- 4.Elon Musk
- 5.Donald Trump
- 6.Yvette Cooper
- 7.Andrew Dudfield
- 8.Akis Tselepis
- 9.Zhang Guoqing
- 10.Xi Jinping
- 11.Xavier Niel
- 12.Volodymyr Zelenskiy