Child safety groups call on porn sites to voluntarily introduce age verification

The call, led by Barnardo’s, urges sites to voluntarily put tighter controls on online porn to better protect children.

Martyn Landi
Thursday 31 March 2022 00:01 BST
Child safety groups have called for pornography sites to introduce age verification (Dominic Lipinski/PA)
Child safety groups have called for pornography sites to introduce age verification (Dominic Lipinski/PA) (PA Wire)

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Pornography websites should introduce age verification tools as quickly as possible to better protect children from harmful content, an open letter from child safety groups has urged.

Published by children’s charity Barnardo’s, the letter calls on commercial porn sites to change their content standards to bring them into line with the British Board of Film Classification’s ratings for violent and pornographic content.

The letter, which has been signed by more than a dozen safety organisations, argues that many porn sites feature depictions of practices that meet the definition of criminal standards for sexual violence and would be illegal to buy on DVD or Blu-ray in the UK, and the same standards should apply online.

Every day children are seeing harmful pornography online and we must act now to protect them.

Barnardo's chief executive, Lynn Perry

It comes in the wake of the Online Safety Bill entering Parliament, which will introduce laws to force sites hosting pornographic content to implement age verification processes, but Barnardo’s has warned this could take up to three years to be implemented, which is why it and other groups are calling on sites to voluntarily introduce age verification as soon as possible.

A YouGov survey commissioned by Barnardo’s and published alongside the open letter showed that 69% of UK adults agree that the kind of extreme pornography that would be illegal on DVD should also be illegal online.

Barnardo’s chief executive, Lynn Perry, said: “Every day children are seeing harmful pornography online and we must act now to protect them.

“The Government has rightly committed to passing new laws but they could take up to three years to come into force, and in the meantime millions of children could be seeing harmful content millions of times over, with serious consequences for their mental health, their understanding of consent, and their perception of healthy relationships.

“That’s why as a group of organisations supporting children and young people, we are calling on the owners of leading commercial pornography sites to take action by introducing age-verification measures now, before it becomes a legal requirement.”

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