Online Safety Act not ‘job done’, Molly Russell’s father warns next government

3 June 2024, 00:04

The next government should not see the Online Safety Act as a "job done" in protecting children, a bereaved campaigner father has said (Peter Byrne/PA)
Technology stock. Picture: PA

Ian Russell said a new government will need to work out how to ‘keep on top’ of developments in the fast-changing world of tech.

Seeing the Online Safety Act as a “job done” would be a “disaster”, a bereaved father has said as he called on the next government to commit to updating legislation to tackle harms affecting children.

Ian Russell, whose 14-year-old daughter Molly took her own life, said bold measures are needed to reassure parents of “real change” when it comes to internet safety and their children.

In 2022, a coroner ruled schoolgirl Molly, from Harrow, north-west London, died from “an act of self-harm while suffering from depression and the negative effects of online content” in November 2017.

Molly Russell took her own life aged 14, having views harmful content online (Family handout/PA)
Molly Russell took her own life aged 14, having views harmful content online (Family handout/PA)

The Online Safety Act passed into law in October, and regulator Ofcom is working on codes of practice to help it enforce the rules, although they will not begin to take effect until next year.

The legislation requires social media companies to curb the spread of illegal content on their platforms and protect children from seeing potentially harmful material, with large fines among the potential penalties for those who breach the new rules.

But Mr Russell said while the Act has laid “really important” foundations, a new government will need to work out how to “keep on top” of developments in the fast-changing world of tech.

The Molly Rose Foundation – the suicide prevention charity set up in his daughter’s memory – has published a five-point plan which it said would build on regulation and fast-track “much-needed” change.

Mr Russell told the PA news agency it would be “wrong to forget about the Online Safety Act, or to think of it as a piece of legislation that only hit the statute books towards the end of 2023 and so it’s done”.

He added: “It’s not done because it’s so new, it’s not done because it will need revising, it’s not done because tech moves at such a pace that, even if we were to catch up in terms of legislation and regulation, tech would have moved on and we’d have to adapt it to catch up with tech again.

“So this is a constantly evolving thing and it would just be a disaster if the next government starts to regard the Online Safety Act as a job done. This isn’t finished, they need to complete the work and need to work out how to keep on top of it.”

He said it must be made clear to tech firms that “the cost of entry to the UK market is children’s safety” as he called for a “fundamental reset of the relationship” between such companies and children.

The plan laid out by the foundation includes calling for tech companies to have an overarching duty under the Act, and a requirement that the regulator focuses on measurable harm reduction – with Mr Russell giving an example of annual surveys to track the amount of harm found online and how individual tech platforms’ algorithmic systems promote harmful content.

Ian Russell has been a vocal campaigner calling for stronger regulations and legislation on online safety (Yui Mok/PA)
Ian Russell has been a vocal campaigner calling for stronger regulations and legislation on online safety (Yui Mok/PA)

It also calls for tech giants to have a legal duty to report on exposure to online harms in their corporate accounts, a one-off harm reduction windfall tax, a statutory code for app stores and operating systems leading to “high-quality, well-designed age assurance and parental controls on children’s devices”, and investment in education and mental health support.

The foundation does not support calls for phone or social media bans, saying these would “risk a slew of unintended
consequences and may cause more harm than good”.

Mr Russell said: “Political parties should commit to bold measures that can reassure parents real change is on the way.

“Regulation is evidently the best solution to a complex issue, not bans or restrictions that would punish children for the failure of Big Tech.

“Politicians should commit to transform children’s lives with a new Online Safety Act and a set of ambitious measures to take on Big Tech’s harmful business model.”

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

Alexander McCartney, 26, has admitted 185 charges involving 70 children

Online predator who drove 12-year-old catfish victim to suicide to be sentenced after admitting 185 charges

Sewell Setzer III and his mother

Boy, 14, 'killed himself after becoming obsessed with Game of Thrones A.I chatbot'

Meta is set to introduce facial recognition technology to crack down on celebrity advert scams

Facebook and Instagram launch technology to crack down on celebrity scam adverts

Tesla used this AI-Generated image at their We, Robot event

Blade Runner 2049 creators sue Elon Musk over AI-generated Robotaxi images

Mark Zuckerberg speaks about Meta AI during the Meta Connect Conference in California in September

Meta AI tools come to UK for first time

Google Stock

US government says it is considering breaking up Google after competition case

A woman’s hand pressing keys on a laptop keyboard

Lack of digital confidence costing people money and job opportunities – study

A person using a laptop

Government opens new competition to find next generation of cybersecurity talent

Exclusive
Ukrainian military learn to fly drones with bombs attached at a special school on May 12, 2023 in Lviv region Ukraine.

Ukraine’s AI-powered drone swarms signal the future of warfare and 'level the playing field' with Russia, report reveals

Web search page with Google

Google ordered to open app store to rivals by US judge

Appeals Centre Europe is an independent body (PA)

Social media users can appeal over content disputes to new settlement body

A close-up of a group of young people looking at mobile phones

Fear of missing out sees girls stay online despite negativity, survey finds

A close up of copper inside electrical cables

Recycling old cables could help provide copper needed for green tech – study

A woman’s hands on a laptop keyboard.

New regulatory office ‘to help new tech reach public faster’

Woman talking on mobile phone and working on laptop

New AI-powered scam detection tool launches

Google screen

Google brings more AI to search engine in ‘significant’ update