Internet Safety Strategy: The UK's new Green Paper

The UK Government recently published its new consultation document: Internet Safety Strategy. This Green Paper marks a step to "developing a coordinated, strategic approach to online safety". Here, online safety expert John Carr gives his first reactions.

Date 2017-10-18 Author John Carr, eSafety expert
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"Today saw the launch of the long-awaited Green Paper (consultative document) setting out the UK Government's thinking on what a new internet safety strategy might look like. Containing almost 60 pages of densely-written text, it pretty much covers the entire online child safety and child welfare horizon plus a couple of extra bits e.g. fraud and older people. In addition, while online dating sites and hate speech have not, historically, been part of the children's internet agenda, the fact is they definitely are now so well done to all for including them.

I am not going to try to sum up everything in the Green Paper today but here are three of what I think are key headlines:

  • The Digital Economy Act, 2017, requires a Code of Practice to be developed to guide or at any rate describe how social media platforms are expected to behave across a broad spectrum of issues. This we already knew. What the Green Paper makes clear is that this could become linked to a sanctions regime to ensure compliance. Gulp! I must have missed that but the key word there is "could". We shall see. Sanctions, or the threat of them, certainly seem to be doing the trick in Germany.
  • A levy is to be established to fund awareness raising and preventative activity although here it is clear it will be voluntary. What is unclear is if the expectation is that it would simply siphon off funds companies are already spending e.g. on initiatives such as Internet Matters or if it would go into a kitty that the Government would control.
  • Without wishing to diminish the importance of either of the above, for me the truly encouraging bit of the Green Paper concerned what the Government are asking for in terms of transparency.

We simply do not know the truth about the real scale and nature of what is happening to children and young people on the different platforms and how well, or otherwise, the companies responsible are addressing them, within what timescales and so on. And just to make it clear, the we here is not just policy wonks, it is parents, teachers and children and young people themselves.

Given the absolutely central role the internet plays in all our lives it is no longer acceptable for companies to ask everybody to take everything on trust. With great power comes great responsibility and with great responsibility also comes a need for accountability.

There can be no real accountability without transparency. The transparency dimension is also to be voluntary but on the Today programme on Radio 4 this morning, Karen Bradley MP, Secretary of State with responsibility in this area, was quite clear (paraphrasing)

If this voluntary approach does not work we will legislate.

I guess I have a rather world-weary sense that that's where we are going to end up so I am disappointed we didn't take that final and inevitable step now. Instead, we are making one last visit to the Last Chance Saloon.

And was it a coincidence that just as the Green Paper emerges today we learn that Ofcom finally seems to accept both that the internet can be regulated and that the big internet platforms are in fact publishers?

The wind has been blowing in this direction for quite a while but when even conservative-old Ofcom starts tacking you sense that it looks like turning into a gale.

The closing date for comments on the Green Paper is 7 December 2017."

This article was first published on John Carr's blog, Desiderata, and is reproduced here with permission.

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Better Internet for Kids Portal, European Schoolnet, the European Commission or any related organisations or parties.

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