online safety act (2)

31039529656?profile=RESIZE_400xMinisters want companies like Apple and Google to build nudity-detection algorithms directly into their operating systems, preventing users from taking photos or sharing explicit images of children unless they have verified that they are adults. 

Under the proposal, adults would need to confirm their age, potentially through biometric checks or official identification, to disable the blocks and create or access such content.[1]

People familiar with matter told the Financial Times that the measur

12402292293?profile=RESIZE_400xThe first person in the UK to be convicted of a ‘cyber flashing’ offence has been jailed for 66 weeks after a judge warned him, she had a “duty to protect” victims.  The sentence was passed down at Southend Crown Court after sending unsolicited explicit photos to a 15-year-old and a woman.  The 39-year-old male, from Basildon, Essex, sent the victims digital pictures of his genitals on 9 February 2024.[1] 

Cyber flashing refers to the sending of an unsolicited sexual image to people via social m