Crime and Policing Bill

UK Government Plans Porn Choking Ban: Censorship or Safety?

As part of a government initiative to combat violence against women and girls, online pornography depicting strangulation or suffocation will be outlawed. This decision follows a review highlighting the normalization of choking in mainstream porn and its potential impact on young people. Amendments to the Crime and Policing Bill will criminalize both possessing and publishing such content, with online platforms mandated to detect and remove it. The Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) emphasized that this move elevates choking in pornography to a “priority offence” under the Online Safety Act, akin to child sexual abuse material and terrorism content.

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UK to Criminalize Strangulation in Porn: Critics Question Motivation, Impact

New amendments to the Crime and Policing bill will criminalize pornography featuring strangulation or suffocation, requiring tech platforms to prevent UK users from accessing such content. This follows recommendations from a government review highlighting the normalization of strangulation and its associated dangers, including potential brain damage. Simultaneously, the time limit for prosecuting victims of intimate image abuse will be extended from six months to three years. Platforms failing to comply with the ban on choking content will face significant fines, emphasizing the government’s commitment to combating online misogyny and the harmful effects of violent pornography.

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UK to Criminalize Sexually Explicit Deepfakes

The U.K. government will criminalize the creation and sharing of sexually explicit deepfake images, addressing the alarming rise of this form of online abuse, particularly against women and girls. This new offense, part of the Crime and Policing Bill, expands existing child protection laws to include adults and will carry a potential two-year prison sentence. Further legal updates will increase penalties for taking intimate images without consent and installing equipment to facilitate such acts, also punishable by up to two years in prison. These measures aim to provide law enforcement with stronger tools to combat non-consensual intimate image abuse and hold perpetrators accountable.

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