UK Fines Porn Company £1 Million for Inadequate Age Checks Amid Circumvention Methods
The UK's communications regulator, Ofcom, has imposed a hefty fine of £1 million ($1.33 million) on AVS Group, a porn operator accused of failing to implement robust age checks on its website. The company is also facing an additional £50,000 fine for its lack of response to information requests.
In July, the UK government announced plans to introduce stricter age verification measures for adult websites as part of its Online Safety Act. This law requires websites that publish or display pornographic content to implement "highly effective" age checks. These methods include credit card checks, photo ID matching, and even using artificial intelligence to estimate a user's age based on their selfie.
However, users have found ways to circumvent these measures, such as using Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to mask their IP addresses or generating fake ChatGPT-generated IDs to pass the verification process. This has left Ofcom questioning the effectiveness of its current system.
The fine is the third in a series of penalties issued under the UK's Online Safety Act, which aims to protect both children and adults from exposure to harmful content. In October, the imageboard website 4Chan was fined £20,000 for failing to comply with an Ofcom request for information under the same law.
The UK is not alone in its efforts to implement age checks online. Around half of US states have introduced similar measures, while France, Italy, Australia, and China also require age verification on adult websites. Australia has taken a more drastic approach by banning social media use among children under 16, including popular platforms like Twitch and YouTube.
Ofcom's safety director, Oliver Griffiths, warned that the regulator will continue to crack down on weak age verification measures and expects tech companies to step up their efforts next year. "The tide of online safety is beginning to turn for the better," he said. "But we need to see much more from tech companies if they fall short."
The UK's communications regulator, Ofcom, has imposed a hefty fine of £1 million ($1.33 million) on AVS Group, a porn operator accused of failing to implement robust age checks on its website. The company is also facing an additional £50,000 fine for its lack of response to information requests.
In July, the UK government announced plans to introduce stricter age verification measures for adult websites as part of its Online Safety Act. This law requires websites that publish or display pornographic content to implement "highly effective" age checks. These methods include credit card checks, photo ID matching, and even using artificial intelligence to estimate a user's age based on their selfie.
However, users have found ways to circumvent these measures, such as using Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) to mask their IP addresses or generating fake ChatGPT-generated IDs to pass the verification process. This has left Ofcom questioning the effectiveness of its current system.
The fine is the third in a series of penalties issued under the UK's Online Safety Act, which aims to protect both children and adults from exposure to harmful content. In October, the imageboard website 4Chan was fined £20,000 for failing to comply with an Ofcom request for information under the same law.
The UK is not alone in its efforts to implement age checks online. Around half of US states have introduced similar measures, while France, Italy, Australia, and China also require age verification on adult websites. Australia has taken a more drastic approach by banning social media use among children under 16, including popular platforms like Twitch and YouTube.
Ofcom's safety director, Oliver Griffiths, warned that the regulator will continue to crack down on weak age verification measures and expects tech companies to step up their efforts next year. "The tide of online safety is beginning to turn for the better," he said. "But we need to see much more from tech companies if they fall short."