Major U.K. ISP Steps Up Porn Filtering

LONDON — TalkTalk, one of the U.K.’s largest ISPs has become the first major company to step up support for the country's hot button porn filtering issue.

In an apparent move to appease conservative members of Parliament pushing for full opt-in porn filtering in order to protect children, the company is now making new and existing customers choose whether they want its Homesafe filter installed.

Although the measure falls short of an automatic system that would block porn unless the user chooses to opt-in, it forces its nearly 4.2 million Internet subscribers to make a decision annually.

According to the Daily Mail — that’s mounted its own “Block Online Porn” campaign — the company predicts that 1 million subscribers will sign on by next March.

The filter has been available to Internet subscribers since May 2011 and blocks sites that Talk Talk considers unsuitable for people under 18 including porn, gambling, dating, drugs, weapons, suicide and self harming.

Homesafe will monitor every computer, mobile phone, games console or e-reader for  users that have access to the Internet trough TalkTalk’s home’s broadband connection.

The system is reportedly not foolproof but is geared at stopping kids from accidentally viewing explicit material.

Adults who want their porn can remove the block and turn it back on when necessary.

Dido Harding, chief executive of TalkTalk, said that making the safe for children was as important now as road safety was in the ‘70’s.

“Our competitors are being dreadfully slow to wake up to the fact that society as a whole cares strongly about this,” she told the Sunday Times.

The Mail reported that it believes other ISPs will soon follow suit October with filtering on specific devices, such as mobile phones or laptops, rather than block porn.

Member of parliament Claire Perry, one of the staunchest supporters of a mandatory opt-in program, said TalkTalk’s move was a "massive step forward" and would put pressure on rivals such as BT, Virgin Media and Sky. "They are coming kicking and screaming," she added.

Virgin Media, reportedly services 4.1 million users, while communications giants BT and Sky have 6 and 3.8 million subscribers respectively.

According to The Mail, only 3 percent of porn sites accessible in the U.K. require proof-of-age before allowing access, and two thirds have no sexually explicit content and adults only warning.

Related:  

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

U of Wisconsin Lawyers Admit to Political, Donor Pressure to Terminate Prof. Joe Gow Over OnlyFans Content

Lawyers for the Universities of Wisconsin admitted during a hearing Friday that the institution has received pressure from a Republican politician and from a donor to strip veteran UW professor of communications Joe Gow of tenure for unremorsefully creating and appearing in adult content.

Heritage Foundation Leader Kevin Roberts Doubles Down on Defense of Anti-Porn Project 2025

Heritage Foundation and current Project 2025 leader Kevin Roberts appeared on Fox News' Special Report with Bret Baier on Wednesday to defend the controversial conservative initiative, which includes a call to criminalize the production and distribution of pornography.

Open Mind AI Seeks Inclusion in EU's AI Debate

New European industry initiative Open Mind AI has penned a letter asking EU authorities to include adult companies and creators in ongoing discussions on setting up a legal framework for AI content.

Canadian Law Professor: Proposed Age Verification Bill 'Will Make Things Worse'

Leading Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail this week published an op-ed written by a legal scholar outlining fundamental issues with the Conservative-backed age verification bill currently making its way through Parliament.

UK Labour Government Confirms it Will Continue Baroness-Led 'Porn Review'

The Labour government of U.K. Prime Minister Keir Starmer has confirmed it will continue the controversial full review of British pornography laws ordered by former Conservative Prime Minister Rishi Sunak in 2023.

AEBN Publishes Popular Searches for July and August

AEBN has released the top search terms for the months of July and August from its straight and gay theaters in all 50 states and the District of Columbia.

SWR Data Survey Probes Concerns About Political Attacks on Industry

SWR Data, an adult-sector market research firm led by industry veterans Mike Stabile and MelRose Michaels, has released data from its upcoming 2024 State of the Creator report, illustrating creators’ concerns about political attacks on the industry.

FSC Urges SCOTUS to Strike Down 'Unconstitutional' Texas Age Verification Law

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) urged the U.S. Supreme Court through a brief filed Monday to strike down Texas’ age verification law as unconstitutional.

Japanese Manga Industry Hit by Credit Card Companies' Anti-Porn Restrictions

Japanese manga retailers are reporting pressure from multinational credit card companies — many based in the U.S. and targeted by anti-porn religious conservatives — to censor their content if they wish to maintain their current payment processing arrangements.

Netherlands Government Continues Porn Probe Following Abuse Allegations

The Dutch government plans to continue investigating the local porn industry in the Netherlands, following a series of abuse allegations involving photographer and self-styled “model scout” Daniël van der W.

Show More