Grazia CASA launches spring edition
Following the success of the inaugural issue which hit newsstands last October.
Industry News
Industry News
Secretary of State for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Oliver Dowden has delivered a ministerial statement outlining the full Government response to Online Harms White Paper this afternoon in the House of Commons.
The Online Safety Bill, which will be ready in 2021, will give effect to a new regulatory framework establishing a duty of care on companies to improve the safety of their users online, overseen and enforced by an independent regulator.
Ofcom will be named as the regulator in legislation and will be given the powers to require companies to use technology to identify illegal content involving child sexual abuse or terrorism as a last resort.
The new regulatory framework will apply to companies whose services:
Ofcom will be able to fine companies "failing in their duty of care" up to £18m or 19% of their annual global turnover. The areas of action outlined by Mr Dowden include child abuse, terrorism and content inciting violence and hatred, and hateful content threatening violence.
Before the Online Safety Bill comes into effect in 2021, the Government will publish a 'One Stop Shop' with practical guidance for companies on how to protect children online.
Following the success of the inaugural issue which hit newsstands last October.
Content is a precious commodity for publishers, meaning instances of illegal copying come at a cost. Here, in the first of two articles, Matt Aspinall,
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