The tech platforms can be forced to prevent illegal content from going viral and people can be forced to send virtual gifts or limit the ability to record the child’s livestream, which is under more online safety measures proposed under more online safety measures.
The UK regulator published a consultation on Monday, seeking consideration on further security to keep citizens, especially children, safe online.
These may also include assessing some large platforms whether they need to continuously find out terrorist material under online security measures.
Oliver Griffith, Director of Online Safety Group, said its proposed measures want to construct on the existing UK online security rules, but stay with “continuously developed” risks.
“We are organizing platforms to account and launch Swift enforcement action, where we are worried,” he said.
“But technology and losses are constantly developing, and we are always seeing how we can make life safe online.”
Consultation highlighted three main areas, in which think more can be done:
- Preventing illegal material from going viral
- Source loss at source
- Giving more protection to children
The BBC has approached Tikok, Livestreaming platform Twich and Meta – who owns Instagram, Facebook and Threads for comments.
Tom The limit of proposals targets many issues – from the misuse of intimate image to the danger of people for physical damage on livestream – and they differ in how or stage shape they can apply.
For example, the proposals that providers have a mechanism to report users to report a livestream, if its content “reflects the risk of adjacent physical damage” will apply to all user-to-use sites that allow a single user to alive for many people, where there may be a risk of showing illegal activity.
Meanwhile, the potential requirements for platforms to use proactive techniques to detect a harmful content for children will apply only to the largest technical firms that offer high risk of relevant loss.
Ian Russell, president of the Molly Rose Foundation, said, “Further measures are always welcomed, but they will not address systemic weaknesses in the online security act.”
He said that Antom showed “lack of ambition” in his approach to regulation.
“As long as the focus on focusing on the focus on the focus is, the regulation will fail to maintain the loss with the existing levels of loss and the dangers of major new suicides and self-loss,” said Mr. Russell.
“It’s time for the Prime Minister to intervene and introduce a strong online security act that can prevent all the risks taken by his platforms to deal with the damable losses prevented by compelling companies to identify and fix.”
The counseling is open until 20 October 2025 and is expected to receive response from service providers, civil society, law enforcement and public members.
This comes when the take platforms bring their services to the UK’s comprehensive online safety regulations that have been assigned with the implementation of the com.
Some have already taken steps to try and hold on the characteristics that experts have warned that children can be exposed to grooming, such as through livestroke.
In 2022, Tiktok increased its minimum age to the banned children to go live on the platform from 16 to 18 – a BBC investigation received shortly after the BBC investigation. Syrian refugees with children who begged for donations keep eating hundreds of accounts from Camps.,
YouTube recently Said It will increase its threshold for users from July 16 to 16 from July 22 to 16.