Ministers drop ‘harmful communications’ offence with some arguing it was ‘legislating for hurt feelings’
The online safety bill is returning to parliament under the aegis of its fourth prime minister and seventh secretary of state since it was first proposed as an online harms white paper under Theresa May.
Each of those has been determined to leave their fingerprints on the legislation, which has swollen to encompass everything from age verification on pornography to criminalisation of posting falsehoods online, and Rishi Sunak and digital and culture secretary Michelle Donelan are no different.
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Ministers drop ‘harmful communications’ offence with some arguing it was ‘legislating for hurt feelings’
The online safety bill is returning to parliament under the aegis of its fourth prime minister and seventh secretary of state since it was first proposed as an online harms white paper under Theresa May.
Each of those has been determined to leave their fingerprints on the legislation, which has swollen to encompass everything from age verification on pornography to criminalisation of posting falsehoods online, and Rishi Sunak and digital and culture secretary Michelle Donelan are no different. Continue reading…Technology | The Guardian