- New review launched into online laws
- Code of practice will set new standards for online
platforms
-
New guide for
teachers to develop children’s online safety
skills
The Prime Minister has announced plans to review laws and
make sure that what is illegal offline is illegal online as
the Government marks Safer Internet Day.
The Law Commission will launch a review of current
legislation on offensive online communications to ensure
that laws are up to date with technology.
As set out in the Internet Safety
Strategy Green Paper, the Government is clear that
abusive and threatening behaviour online is totally
unacceptable. This work will determine whether laws are
effective enough in ensuring parity between the treatment
of offensive behaviour that happens offline and online.
The Prime Minister has also announced:
- That the Government will introduce a comprehensive new
social media code of practice this year, setting out
clearly the minimum expectations on social media companies
- The introduction of an annual internet safety
transparency report - providing UK data on offensive online
content and what action is being taken to remove it.
Other announcements made today by Secretary of State for
Digital, Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) include:
- A new online safety
guide for those working with children, including
school leaders and teachers, to prepare young people for
digital life
- A commitment from major online platforms including
Google, Facebook and Twitter to put in place specific
support during election campaigns to ensure abusive content
can be dealt with quickly – and that they will provide
advice and guidance to Parliamentary candidates on how to
remain safe and secure online
DCMS Secretary of State said:
We want to make the UK the safest place in the world to
be online and having listened to the views of parents,
communities and industry, we are delivering on the
ambitions set out in our Internet Safety Strategy.
Not only are we seeing if the law needs updating to
better tackle online harms, we are moving forward with
our plans for online platforms to have tailored
protections in place - giving the UK public standards of
internet safety unparalleled anywhere else in the world.
Law Commissioner Professor David Ormerod QC said:
There are laws in place to stop abuse but we’ve moved on
from the age of green ink and poison pens. The digital
world throws up new questions and we need to make sure
that the law is robust and flexible enough to answer
them.
If we are to be safe both on and off line, the criminal
law must offer appropriate protection in both spaces. By
studying the law and identifying any problems we can give
government the full picture as it works to make the UK
the safest place to be online.
The latest announcements follow the publication of
the Government’s
Internet Safety Strategy Green Paper last year
which outlined plans for a social media code of practice.
The aim is to prevent abusive behaviour online, introduce
more effective reporting mechanisms to tackle bullying or
harmful content, and give better guidance for users to
identify and report illegal content. The Government will be
outlining further steps on the strategy, including more
detail on the code of practice and transparency reports, in
the spring.
To support this work, people working with children
including teachers and school leaders will be given a new
guide for online safety, to help educate young people in
safe internet use. Developed by the UK Council for Child
Internet Safety (UKCCIS, the
toolkit describes the knowledge and skills for staying safe
online that children and young people should have at
different stages of their lives.
Major online platforms including Google, Facebook and
Twitter have also agreed to take forward a recommendation
from the Committee on Standards in Public Life (CSPL) to
provide specific support for Parliamentary candidates so
that they can remain safe and secure while on these sites.
during election campaigns. These are important steps in
safeguarding the free and open elections which are a key
part of our democracy.
ENDS
Note to editors:
Included in the Law Commission’s scope for their review
will be the Malicious Communications Act and the
Communications Act. It will consider whether difficult
concepts need to be reconsidered in the light of
technological change - for example, whether the definition
of who a ‘sender’ is needs to be updated.
The Government will bring forward an Annual Internet Safety
Transparency report, as proposed in our Internet Safety
Strategy green paper. The reporting will show:
- the amount of harmful content reported to companies
- the volume and proportion of this material that is
taken down
- how social media companies are handling and responding
to complaints
- how each online platform moderates harmful and abusive
behaviour and the policies they have in place to tackle it.
Annual reporting will help to set baselines against which
to benchmark companies’ progress, and encourage the sharing
of best practice between companies.
The new social media code of practice will outline
standards and norms expected from online platforms. It will
cover:
- The development, enforcement and review of robust
community guidelines for the content uploaded by users and
their conduct online
- The prevention of abusive behaviour online and the
misuse of social media platforms – including action to
identify and stop users who are persistently abusing
services
- The reporting mechanisms that companies have in place
for inappropriate, bullying and harmful content, and
ensuring they have clear policies and performance metrics
for taking this content down
- The guidance social media companies offer to help users
identify illegal content and contact online, and advise
them on how to report it to the authorities, to ensure this
is as clear as possible
- The policies and practices companies apply around
privacy issues.
Education for a Connected World: A framework to equip
children and young people for digital life is available on
the UKCCIS page of
GOV.UK.
- Guidance is given on eight different aspects of online
education: self-image and identity, online relationships,
online reputation, online bullying, managing online
information, health, wellbeing and lifestyle, privacy and
security, and copyright and ownership.
- The Framework has been developed by members of the
UKCCIS Education Working Group.
- UKCCIS is a group of more than 200 organisations drawn
from across government, industry, law, academia and charity
sectors working in partnership to help keep children safe
online.
- The UKCCIS Education Working Group brings together ten
leading organisations in online safety in education:,
Barnardo’s, CEOP (the child protection command of the
National Crime Agency), Childnet, Department for Education,
Kent County Council, the NSPCC, Parent Zone, the PSHE
Association, South West Grid for Learning and the UK Safer
Internet Centre. It focuses on how education settings in
the UK are responding to the challenges of keeping their
pupils safe online.
Supportive statements:
Jonathan Baggaley, CEO of the PSHE Association said:
We’re delighted to have supported the development of the
UKCCIS framework. Education plays a critical role in
preparing young people for the opportunities and
challenges of this rapidly changing digital world. The
UKCCIS framework provides an invaluable tool for
teachers, supporting them to plan a developmental
curriculum which will help children to thrive online.’
Ken Corish, Online Safety Director at South West Grid for
Learning said:
Children and young people use technology in empowering
and sophisticated ways in online environments that have
become increasingly complex. Our approach to educating in
this area requires a sophistication to match; it should
resonate; be relevant and prompt the outcomes that affect
cultural change.
This UKCCIS framework has been designed to identify those
opportunities for anyone shaping their teaching in this
area from very young children right through to young
adults. It brings the current online technology landscape
into one document and maps those opportunities against
age/developmental stage.
We think it is both challenging and relevant and hope it
assists in creating online technology education that
makes a difference.
Barnardo’s Chief Executive, Javed Khan said:
Barnardo’s welcomes this framework for educators to help
children and young people of all ages stay safe and have
a positive experience online.
The fast-moving digital world puts increasing pressures
on children which can affect their self-image and make
them vulnerable to potential bullying and grooming
online.
This UKCISS framework should be used by the tech industry
to incorporate age appropriate safeguards into their apps
and platforms to help prevent abuse happening.