The fightback against regulations to lock down the internet in the UK is heating up, with multiple big groups joining together with a firm statement.
An open letter has been sent to UK policymakers urging them to fight the actual causes of online harm, rather than repeatedly taking steps to lock down the internet and force us all to verify our ID just to do basic things. Which increases tracking, creates more places for private data to leak and a whole host of other problems. In terms of gaming, it can be a big problem for preservation too for any game that has online features.
The groups / companies who came together to sign the statement include:
- Big Brother Watch
- Defend Digital Me
- Electronic Frontier Foundation
- ExpressVPN
- Gamers Voice
- Global Partners Digital
- Index on Censorship
- Internet Society
- IPVanish
- Mozilla
- Mullvad VPN
- NO2ID
- Open Rights Group
- Privacymatters
- Proton
- Stop Killing Games
- Tor Project
- Tuta
- VPN Trust Initiative
The full statement:
Joint Statement: UK policymakers must prioritise addressing the roots of online harm, not undermining the open web
The open Internet is a global public resource that has long since become foundational to the flourishing of individuals, businesses, and societies. Digital technologies and the open web allow us to foster connections, access educational resources, express ourselves, and work together to build a better society. The open web is also an engine for economic growth, innovation and creativity: anyone can build successful services and products, and reach people across the globe. At the core of this openness lie open standards, shared protocols, and interoperability across borders as the default.
This openness and the opportunities it affords are coming under threat in the UK. In attempting to respond to tough questions around online harms, UK policymakers are currently pursuing blunt policy interventions like access bans that will do little to improve young people’s experiences online, and instead undermine the web and infringe on human rights.
Now that the Children’s Wellbeing and Schools Bill has passed, ministers are consulting on which platforms and specific features should be placed behind age gates as part of a national consultation on online harms. This approach focuses on restricting young people’s access, rather than ensuring services are designed to uphold their rights and interests by default. Crucially, even targeted age restrictions of specific features could mean that all users are required to complete intrusive age assurance processes to retain full access. Restrictions under consultation include curfews for young users and wider restrictions on children’s access to online services, with implications across internet services from video games, VPNs to even static websites. Implementing such access restrictions hinges on all users having to verify their ages, not just young people, and places the burden on providers to comply in ways they consider appropriate.
As the UK’s experiences with age assurance under the Online Safety Act have shown, deploying age assurance technologies at scale comes with significant trade-offs: Existing age assurance technologies are either insufficiently accurate, undermine privacy and data security, or are not widely available across populations. Beyond concerns related to age assurance technologies themselves, mandating their implementation across an ever-expanding list of core internet services undermines the decentralised nature of the web, its accessibility and creates serious new security threats. Specifically, age assurance mandates risk cementing the dominance of gatekeeper app stores, operating systems, and platforms’ walled gardens. They also risk turning the web into a patchwork of age-gated jurisdictions, undermining free expression and access to information, rather than a global resource accessible by all. Finally, age assurance technologies create massive data risks for all users, as demonstrated by serious breaches of UK users’ government ID data.
The internet is an essential resource that enables young people to engage with the world in a way that transcends their immediate environment, as well as find information they may not feel safe to access offline, such as about family abuse, politics, or their sexuality. At the same time, however, digital spaces can carry risks for different populations, including young people. These risks are real and require thoughtful policy interventions that address the root of the issue, not just simplistic policies like access bans. Of particular importance is the way that most online spaces are not built with users’ rights or choices in mind, but optimised for extracting value for online platforms. Underlying this is often the massive collection of user data used to target, lock-in and surveil users—feeding platforms ads-based business models.
Addressing these harmful practices and holding tech companies accountable for providing safe online spaces that strengthen, not undermine users’ choices and agency, must be the priority of UK policymakers. Now is the time to hold tech to account, not undermine the open internet. Signatories of this letter remain ready to provide expertise, working with policymakers to ensure that measures that aim to keep children safe online are effective, proportional and enable them to exercise all their human rights.
You can find the announcements across various websites from the included orgs like ones from Mozilla, EFF, Stop Killing Games and others.
If there is illegal activities happening in some streets, the solution is not to ban access to streets.
Nor is it viable to have a police officer that constantly checks that you're allowed to be on a street, even going to the point of investigating if you really appear to be living in that house that you're busy going into.




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