What the Online Safety Bill is really about
If you have followed technology news for a while, you will have heard of the Online Safety Bill in the UK. This bill, framed as “a new set of laws to protect children and adults online,” will make “social media companies more responsible” for what we see via their platforms. Introduced in the spring of 2021, the bill has been altered, altered again, put on hold, put on hold a second time, then altered some more. Experts have repeatedly condemned the bill, arguing that it represents a threat to internet safety.
In short: it’s a disaster.
For example, the BBC recently quoted the UK government as saying:
"The Online Safety Bill does not represent a ban on end-to-end encryption.”
This is misleading. The Online Safety Bill does not “ban” end-to-end encryption. But it forces technology companies to change how their applications work, circumventing the end-to-end security that this encryption provides. Both Signal and WhatsApp, which provide end-to-end encrypted calls and messages, have said that complying with the bill would require them to weaken the overall security of their apps.
You cannot have both end-to-end security and government oversight. You are either surveilled, or you are not.
In the same article, the UK government goes on to say that:
"It is not a choice between privacy or child safety - we can and we must have both."
This is also misleading. The bill forces technology companies to weaken the security of their applications which presents a risk to online privacy; this in turn endangers child safety, not to mention the safety of the adults these children will grow up to become. The government is arguing that we will be more safe without the protections afforded to us by end-to-end security, and rather than give us privacy and child safety, the government is forcing us to compromise on both.
Let’s be clear; this bill was never about improving internet safety, but about the expansion of government control.
Much of the recent debate about the Online Safety Bill has focused on technology, encryption, and how companies are responding. WhatsApp will leave, Signal will walk, Tutanota will wait for it to be blocked. Yes, this bill threatens encryption: it defeats what the encryption is meant to achieve. But we really need to talk more about what we — the adults and children — will be left without if this bill passes.
Alec Muffett wrote last year that the Online Safety Bill would leave his young daughter without “the kinds of privacy, assurance and integrity that to date we have all taken for granted.” Yes, the bill — and its peers in other countries, such as ChatControl in the EU — would impact journalists and their sources; lawyers and their clients; and activists and their missions. But it also leaves future generations without the tools to safely explore, learn, grow, and change the world as they see fit.