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How the U.K. Won’t Keep Porn Away From Teens - The New York Times

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The age verification rule grew from a Conservative party campaign promise in 2015, and ended up tucked into what would become the Digital Economy Act 2017, a wide-ranging bundle of internet rules and regulations.

Among the bill’s consequential but stultifying provisions about telecommunications infrastructure, copyright enforcement and government data sharing, the porn rule remained not only intact but grew stronger over time (thanks in part to copious media coverage). The bill was hastily rubber-stamped before Britain’s 2017 general election, and questions about how exactly it would be enforced, as well as concerns about user privacy, were set aside to be dealt with later.

From How the U.K. Won’t Keep Porn Away From Teens - The New York Times.

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