UK to impose 48-hour online takedown rule for nonconsensual intimate images


A woman uses a smartphone in London, Britain, October 6, 2024. REUTERS/Hollie Adams

LONDON, Feb 18 (Reuters) - Britain will ⁠require technology companies to take down intimate images shared online without consent ⁠within 48 hours or else face fines of up to 10% of ‌eligible global revenue, and even risk having their services blocked.

The government says the steps will improve safeguards for women and girls during a global push to curb abuse in a world where images sent ​privately can be easily shared online and AI-based ⁠tools can instantly create sexually explicit ⁠images.

Britain said on Thursday it would amend legislation passing through parliament to create a ⁠legal ‌duty for major platforms to take down nonconsensual intimate images no more than two days after they are reported.

It is already illegal in Britain to ⁠post such images online, but some victims have reported ​difficulty getting platforms to ‌permanently remove them.

"The online world is the frontline of the 21stcentury battle against ⁠violence against ​women and girls," Prime Minister Keir Starmer said in a statement.

NONCONSENSUAL IMAGES FUELLING ONLINE SAFETY DEBATE

A surge in nonconsensual images has fed into Britain's wider debate over online safety. Ministers are ⁠examining whether to restrict social media access for ​under 16s, echoing Australia's ban.

Britain said its media regulator Ofcom was considering treating the sharing of illegal intimate images with the same severity as child sexual abuse and terrorist ⁠content.

The government said victims would only need to report material once, with platforms expected to remove the same image across services and prevent re-uploads.

Any fines for failing to do so could be applied to a platform's 'Qualifying Worldwide Revenue' - a measure used by ​Ofcom which covers income generated anywhere in the world ⁠from the parts of the service it regulates.

In a separate statement, Ofcom said it would ​fast-track a decision on new rules requiring platforms ‌to use "hash-matching" tools to block illegal intimate images ​at source. The decision would come in May, and new measures could come into effect this summer.

(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti; editing by William James)

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