Weak OSA implementation

Ian Russell highlighted the lost opportunity to minimise online harm in the Observer

Timid new online safety laws won’t prevent more tragedies like the death of my daughter Molly | Ian Russell | The Guardian


Published: March 2025

TWPF campaigns to stop further harm to young people

We are sad to hear about another young life lost to online harm and poison. Vlad's story is heart-breaking and we send our condolences to his family and friends.

Hampshire teen 'encouraged' to take poison by suicide forum users - BBC News

Labour criticised as ‘suicide forums’ escape online safety crackdown (Daily Telegraph behind their paywall)

Published: February 2025

Online Safety Act Categorisation

The concern that the draft Ofcom codes don't meet the will of Parliament due to small harmful sites being out of scope has been brought to the attention of the Lords. Applying the full weight of the OSA to small harmful platforms is the single most effective measure this Parliament can take to reduce harm. 

The regulations now go to the Lords Grand Committee for debate on 25 February. 

Draft Online Safety Act 2023 (Category 1, Category 2A - Hansard - UK Parliament

Published: February 2025

Parliamentary debate on access to Social Media data

This week Parliament debated parents' rights to access Social Media data to build on Coroners' rights to request data.

This is a link to the Hansard:

Children’s Social Media Accounts - Hansard - UK Parliament

Published: January 2025

Ofcom illegal harms code response

TWPF is a co-signatory to the Online Safety Act Network's statement on Ofcom's recently published code of practice. 

The codes are sub-standard and highlight issues with the Online Safety Act and with the implementation of the Act.

Read more here

Published: January 2025

Ofcom illegal harms code published

Ofcom's decision to ignore advice from multiple civil society organisations in their illegal harms code goes against the will of Parliament and forgoes the opportunity to reduce harms online. It allows people to differentiate harm, including the encouragement of suicide, online as being un-policed whereas the equivalent actions in the real world would result in criminal charges and prosecution.

Published: December 2024

Further Online Safety Questions raised

Further questions were raised in Parliament on why harmful internet sites associated with multiple deaths are still accessible in the UK.

  • Munira Wilson MP: “My constituent David Parfett has been in the news speaking about his son Tom, who sadly took his own life following his visits to a very harmful site—quite possibly the same one that the hon. Gentleman is talking about—that promotes how people can take their own lives. He sourced poison that way and took his own life. There are 97 Britons who have lost their lives after using this website. We need to take action on these very small but very harmful websites. The Online Safety Act contains a provision for such websites to be included in category 1, the most highly regulated category, yet the illegal harms code published yesterday does not include them. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that this is a massive oversight, and that these websites should be included in category 1?”

 

  • Richard Burgon MP: Does she agree that those who have not should step up to save lives? Will she assure me that once Ofcom’s powers are fully enacted, the Online Safety Act 2023 will deal with this specific site regardless of the number of people who access it and whether those people are under or over 18?”

 

Munira’s Exchanges with the Government

  • Feryal Clark MP: “People who are thinking about ending their lives or hurting themselves might turn to the internet as a place of refuge. All too often, what they find instead is content encouraging them not to seek help. That deluge of content has a real-world impact. Suicide-related internet use is a factor in around a quarter of deaths by suicide among people aged 10 to 19 in the UK—at least 43 deaths a year. Lots of research in this area focuses on children, but it is important to recognise that suicide-related internet use can be a factor in suicide in all age groups. These harms are real, and tackling them must be a collective effort ..

 

Every site, whether it has five users or 500 million users, will have to proactively remove illegal content, such as content where there is proven intent of encouraging someone to end their life. Ofcom has also set up a “small but risky” supervision taskforce to ensure that smaller forums comply with new measures, and it is ready to take enforcement action if they do not do so. The Government understand that just one person seeing this kind of content could mean one body harmed, one life ended, and one family left grieving.”

 

  • Munira Wilson MP: “The problem is that the sites that the hon. Member for Leeds East (Richard Burgon) referred to—and there are many others like them—do not necessarily fall into the illegal category, although they still have extremely dangerous and harmful content. Despite a cross-party vote in Parliament to include in the Online Safety Act these very small and very dangerous sites in category 1, there has been a proactive decision to leave them out of the illegal harms codes, which were published yesterday. Can the Minister put on record exactly why that is? Why can these sites not be included in that category? There is all sorts of content glamourising suicide, self-harm, eating disorders and other hate speech that is being promoted by these small sites. They should be regulated to a high level.”

 

  • Feryal Clark MP: “Based on research regarding the likely impact of user numbers and functionalities, category 1 is about easy, quick and wide dissemination of regulated  user-generated content. As Melanie Dawes set out in her letter to the Secretary of State in September, Ofcom has established a “small but risky” supervision task, as I mentioned, to manage and enforce compliance among smaller services. It has the power to impose significant penalties and, as I say, to take remedial action against non-compliant services. As the hon. Member for Leeds East mentioned earlier, the Online Safety Act is one of the biggest steps that Government have taken on online safety, but it is imperfect. It is an iterative process, and it will be kept under review.”
     



Published: December 2024

Online Safety question raised

Munira Wilson, LibDem MP for Twickenham, asked a question in Parliament on the government's intention to block a website associated with 88 deaths in the UK.

Click here to view

Published: December 2024

Statement of Strategic Priorities Consultation

TWPF is one of a number of organisations who will contribute to the Statement of Strategic Priorities Consultation.

Published: November 2024

TWPF launch

TWPF has been approved by the Charity Commission.

Published: November 2024

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