Zoe KleinmanKnow-how editor
BBCThe media regulator has revealed pointers designed to make the web safer for girls and women – and threatened to call and disgrace the platforms which flout them.
Ofcom says it hopes the measures will make it simpler to report and act on on-line abuse, acknowledging that these processes are at present “soul destroying.”
Nonetheless, they’re suggestions somewhat than authorized necessities, with the regulator hoping the specter of platforms being outed for not complying with them will compel them to behave.
Critics say it and the federal government must go additional if needs to make the web world safer.
“Till we’ve got legally enforced necessary code of apply, we do not suppose we’ll actually see a shift in tech platforms taking this challenge significantly sufficient,” stated Andrea Simon, government director of the Finish Violence Towards Girls Coalition.
Influencer and girls’s sport advocate Demi Brown instructed the BBC she had been pressured to “turn out to be resilient” in response to detrimental feedback about her weight and look on-line.
She stated it was fallacious that she had to make use of the block button to take away abuse and forestall trolling on her social media accounts.
“I do not suppose that we needs to be frightened concerning the on-line house, it needs to be a spot the place we are able to authentically be ourselves,” she instructed the BBC.
‘Small steps’
Ofcom’s new guidelines introduced on Tuesday embrace asking companies to:
- put all account privateness settings in a single place
- de-monetise content material containing sexual violence
- enable abusive feedback to be reported collectively, not one-by-one as is at present the case
“It is about making reporting a lot simpler as a way to report a number of accounts which can be abusing you on the similar time somewhat than having to do them one after the other, which is completely soul destroying,” stated Ofcom boss Dame Melanie Dawes.
“It is a number of small steps that collectively will assist to maintain folks safer in order that they’ll take pleasure in life on-line,” she added.
She insisted the specter of being referred to as out could be a robust one for tech companies.
“I feel that the transparency that we’ll deliver to this will probably be a really sturdy incentive,” she stated.
UK Know-how Secretary Liz Kendall stated tech companies “have the flexibility and the technical instruments to dam and delete on-line misogyny”.
The steerage enhances earlier codes, rules and guidelines issued by the watchdog because it enforces the On-line Security Act, which turned legislation in 2023.

Sahra-Aisha Muhammad-Jones based a working membership for Muslim girls in east London and stated detrimental DMs and feedback can put youthful girls off being on-line in any respect.
Regardless of having constructed a constructive neighborhood round her, she stated she nonetheless doesn’t really feel secure on the web.
“There may be the aspect to social media that’s actually dangerous and actually scary, and you must be on alert on a regular basis,” she instructed BBC Information.
‘Some simply will not care’
Former secretary of state Baroness Nicky Morgan instructed BBC Radio 4’s Immediately programme it had been a “lengthy battle” to see such measures established.
However she stated seeing them emerge within the type of pointers, somewhat than guidelines, for tech companies was “disappointing”.
“I feel it will get some primary floor guidelines in place however after all, it does rely on the angle of the tech platforms adopting the sensible steerage put ahead,” she stated.
Whereas some platforms could decide to take action, she stated, “some simply will not care and can stick with it with the deeply dangerous content material that we see on-line right now”.
The issues come amid wider criticism of the regulator for not having sufficient tooth.
Thus far Ofcom has issued solely two fines for breaches of the Act.
One of many fined platforms, 4Chan, has refused to pay its £20,000 penalty and launched authorized motion within the US.
Strolling a tightrope
Ofcom is making an attempt to stroll a tightrope between on-line security and freedom of speech. It is usually coping with US-based tech giants which personal the UK’s hottest social networks.
US Vice President JD Vance stated earlier this 12 months that the White Home was rising bored with different international locations making an attempt to control American tech companies.
Ms Kendall wrote to Ofcom lately saying it was in peril of “dropping the general public’s belief” if the tempo of change did not choose up, and campaigners just like the Molly Rose Basis say the legal guidelines don’t go far sufficient to guard folks from on-line hurt.
Chris Boardman, former pro-cyclist and chair of Sport England, complained to Ofcom in the summertime concerning the remedy of ladies in sport on-line.
Throughout final 12 months’s Euro Championships, Lioness footballer Jess Carter was pressured off social media because of online racial abuse.
Tennis star Katie Boulter, who obtained dying threats following the French Open, additionally said abusive comments had become “the norm”.
In his letter, Mr Boardman stated sexist on-line abuse of athletes counteracted efforts to encourage extra girls to take up sport.
“The motion might be taken,” he instructed the BBC, “you have acquired AI [and] algorithms now that are ruthlessly concentrating on advertising and marketing to extend participation and revenue”.
“We now want to make use of those self same instruments to curb the abuse within the first place somewhat than having to work with coping with it after the actual fact,” he stated.



