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Auto porn filters to hit UK web

British prime minister, David Cameron, has announced that in the near future, British households will have an automatic pornography filter implemented by internet service providers, which will block explicit images by default; though there will be an option to turn them off.

Those signing up to new accounts with ISPs, will have the filter automatically enabled, whereas existing customers will likely be contacted to find out whether they want the filter to be enabled or not. If the response is indecisive, or one is not received, the filter will again be automatically turned on.

Of course the reason behind all this is the children of Britain, who according to Mr Cameron, are being irreversibly corrupted by online porn. He uses this fearful idea to explain away the online restrictions, “”I'm not making this speech because I want to moralise or scaremonger,” he said, “but because I feel profoundly as a politician, and as a father, that the time for action has come. This is, quite simply, about how we protect our children and their innocence.”

Perhaps nobody pointed out to Mr Cameron that schools already implement filters and that households can do the same with their own 3rd party filter.

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Other measures being proposed include a crackdown on those viewing what is described as “rape porn,” though it's not explicit as to whether that involves simulations of rape, or footage from real crimes (the latter of which is presumably quite rare). Search engines will also be complicit in blocking content, with Mr Cameron suggesting they have a “moral duty,” to restrict illegal porn. Searching for anything considered to be against the law, will also pop up helpline phone numbers.

But my own sarcastic derision of this isn't the only criticism being slung in the PM's direction; others have been complaining too, from both ends of the spectrum. Ex-head of the Child exploitation and online protection centre, said that this doesn't go far enough and that paedophiles and those viewing illegal content, are unlikely to be deterred by a pop-up helpline number.

ISPs aren't happy either, since they don't want to be forced to censor their own customers – though of course, many of them already have, with the introduction of ineffective court ordered blocks of sites like The Pirate Bay.

Others still, have highlighted that this sounds more like a measure for governments to block content that they do not deem fitting for public viewing. With a system like this in place, they say that it would be easy for the authorities to censor anti-government materials or websites.

KitGuru Says: It seems such an odd thing to have a supposedly right leaning party getting so involved in the affairs of families. Not only is it making it illegal to view very subjective and contextually specific adult content, but it's so vague that the final interpretation is impossible to predict. It will be illegal to “posses internet pornography depicting rape.” The first question is of course, how dooes one possess internet pornography?

And does that mean it would be illegal to watch Irreversible? That movie where Monica Bellucci is the victim of a brutal (and reasonably graphic) rape?

[Cheers BBC]

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11 comments

  1. This is brilliant! Seriously, block it. It’s bad for people and shouldn’t be viewed.

  2. “And does that mean it would be illegal to watch Irreversible? That movie where Monica Bellucci is the victim of a brutal (and reasonably graphic) rape?”

    Would having that, and The Accused be classed as a rape collection?

  3. I swear to God our politician are getting more retarded by the day.

  4. No no it’s okay, because we can’t watch it on the internet or in movies, but games is fine 😛

  5. This is absolutely ridiculous…

  6. How much are they gonna spend on this? An ISP isn’t gonna do it without an incentive and 99.9% of people can do it either through routers or 3rd party software anyways … Government is abit behind the times it seems

  7. This is laughable… this is not going to change a thing. An absolute waste of public money.

  8. Just to help answer your last two questions: the amendment is to existing extreme pornography legislation that already defines ‘possession’ for internet images, which incidentally includes having it in your cache etc so can apply to those who are ‘just looking’ i.e. not downloading as such (http://www.cps.gov.uk/legal/d_to_g/extreme_pornography/).

    Also the legislation only covers pornographic images/films (images need to pass threshold of pornographic to be considered as offence) hence not covering the film you mentioned. Interestingly scenes of sexual violence are already covered and frequently adjusted by the BBFC (http://www.bbfc.co.uk/about-bbfc/media-centre/bbfc-adjust-sexual-and-sadistic-violence-policy-take-account-key-areas).

  9. Personal opinion only, but I would rather they spent 95% of any time/money/resource available on going after child pornographers and the remaining money on other ‘at risk’ groups.
    One thing has to be said and that if you track crime in the UK since the advent of the internet (and all it brings), you will find that it is now around 50% of what it was in 1995.
    Once again: Since the advent of the ‘Evil Internet’, crime overall is down around 50% in the UK.
    Not only that, but violence-based crimes in particular are down by a huge amount.
    Is it possible that if people have a fantasy outlet for urges etc, that they are less likely to act-out in the real world?
    What if we massively increase policing in this area and it results in an INCREASED crime rate in the real world?
    Will we take the American approach to drugs? Fight harder and harder to increase the problem, when common sense says ‘Step back and it will self-regulate’

  10. C’est un vrai plaisir de regarder ce site