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After consultation, Ofcom has unveiled its latest industry guidance which delineates how it anticipates sites and applications to implement “exceptionally effective” age assurance under the Online Safety Act 2023. While the guidance is aimed at limiting access to pornographic material, it applies to any organization seeking to carry out online age verification efficiently.
To summarize, Ofcom’s conclusive stance on age assurance:
Ofcom believes that this approach will lead to the most favorable outcomes for child protection online during the initial phase of the Act’s enforcement. Ofcom has opted not to implement numerical thresholds for exceptionally effective age assurance at this point (like 99% accuracy). However, it recognizes that numerical thresholds may become pertinent in the future, contingent on ongoing developments in testing methodologies, industry norms, and independent studies.
Ofcom anticipates all services to adopt a proactive stance regarding compliance and meeting their respective implementation timelines. It is launching an age assurance enforcement initiative, directing its efforts first at services that showcase or publish their own pornographic content. It will be reaching out to a variety of adult services to inform them of their new responsibilities and asserts that it will not hesitate to take action and initiate investigations against services that do not engage or ultimately comply.
Every service that permits pornography must have exceptionally effective age checks implemented by July 2025 to shield children from accessing it. This requirement holds whether a service publishes its own pornographic content or allows user-generated pornographic material.
Numerous platforms will likely already have age assurance protocols established under the ICO’s Children’s Code, whose guidance now pertains to the requirements of the OSA, but will need to conduct the requisite risk assessments under the OSA along with ensuring that their age assurance protocols are sturdy.
Ofcom has faced criticism for adopting too cautious an approach to the implementation of the OSA, so it might be attempting to alter this perception with this guidance.
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