Short Title: | Online Pornography (Commercial Basis) Regulations 2019 |
Type: | Statutory Instrument |
Parliament: | Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Year: | 2019 |
Citation: | SI 2019/23 |
Use New Uk-Leg: | yes |
The Online Pornography (Commercial Basis) Regulations 2019 is a statutory instrument issued under the powers given by the Digital Economy Act 2017. It defines the criteria to determine which websites would have been required to implement an age verification scheme,[1] as part of the proposed UK Internet age verification system, the implementation of which was eventually abandoned in October 2019.[2]
For the purpose of the regulations, a site is defined as making pornographic material available on a commercial basis for the purposes of the Act if:
The government's explanatory notes to the draft regulations laid before Parliament in 2018 note that "the focus of the legislation should be pornographic websites, rather than popular social media platforms on which pornographic material is only a small part of the overall content".[3]
See main article: Proposed UK Internet age verification system. The British Board of Film Classification was appointed as the age-verification regulator in 2018.[4]
After numerous false starts, the government abandoned the scheme. On 16 October 2019, the culture secretary Nicky Morgan stated that the government had abandoned the mandate altogether, in favour of replacing it with a forthcoming wider scheme of Internet regulation.[2] [5] [6]