Although the BBC article circles linked to doesn't highlight it very well, Mindgeek's AgeID is now the defacto Age Verification system for porn in this country:
https://www.independent.co.uk/life-style...42476.html
I didn't realise the government obviously nicked the idea from Germany. God they can't even come up with
their own bad tech legislation!
Although the free use of AgeID available to independent UK producers is welcome, there's still issues around this:
Engadet Wrote:If there isn't a major viable alternative, one porn distributor may effectively determine how everyone else checks ages. And it's not clear what constitutes an "independent" studio. Is there a fixed metric, or will Mindgeek use subjective criteria? While there's no immediate indication that it intends to abuse its first-mover advantage (it could have charged everyone), there's a lingering concern that it may have the power to decide which porn sites succeed -- and that the government may have trusted too much of its regulatory power to a private firm.
It also wont work with incognito mode and is, of course, dodgy on a shared computer:
http://www.trustedreviews.com/news/pornh...rs-3415551
Checking over the general history of the Bill, I did find some things that maybe of clarification to some (as they were to me)...
Here's a fascinating piece on how Mindgeek changed their tune around this as soon as they saw a financial opportunity:
https://www.theverge.com/2018/2/23/17043...w-mindgeek
Then, as I remembered it part of this Bill was to have all online porn available in this country conform to UK DVD standards. Turns out this idea was dropped last year - it was obviously unworkable. (R18 forbids such routine internet staples as incest themes and female ejaculation amongst others.) Here's an interesting blog on that part of the Bill's last passage through the Lords in spring 2017:
http://pandorablake.com/blog/2017/4/digi...amendments
The latter really is worth reading in full just to see how messy this stuff is but here's bullet points of the other main bits from it if you'd rather not:
"Extreme" porn is still prohibited (a site could be blocked from having a licence if uploads contravene) but this amendment has a much smaller list of defining criteria.
The government defending weakness on data security is so poor it almost looks like they were trading off to get companies to provide AV gateways! Never, surely.
At the time it was thought that another regulator would be needed (to work alongside the BBFC) to do the fining of non-compliant sites. (Fines being the last resort before blocking.) But as it's thought most foreign sites wouldn't pay up this may be being kicked into the long grass; leaving blocking as a rather easy out instead of the last resort it should be. Anyone heard anything on this one since?
Finally, check out the comments and responses beneath the blog. This for instance...
Pandora Blake Wrote:Several times during the debates people said things like "It's high time porn producers, who profit from making adult material available, start taking responsibility for keeping children safe". It seems to me that the fact it will cost us money is very much part of the point - punishing us for distributing naughty content in the first place.
And, perhaps most intriguingly of all, this possible answer to something I've mused about on this forum before:
Alan Wrote:Could you explain a bit more about what you mean by "I can't keep my site open in the UK", Pandora? Does "open in the UK" mean operating in this country or available to UK customers?
Pandora Blake Wrote:The latter - in order to distribute content that is 18, R18 or higher to UK customers, I'll need to install age verification software, and at the moment there isn't a solution which I can afford (and which I trust to not misuse the data of my site visitors). So my plan is to put up a worksafe version of the site explaining what's happened, and redirect UK visitors to that. Of course if you were using a VPN, no-one would be able to tell which country you were visiting from.
Isn't she saying here that UK sites only need comply for UK visitors?! aka they can be left non-AVed to anyone using a VPN.