British PM Starmer seeks greater powers to regulate online access

Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said the move was needed to protect children from fast-changing digital risks.

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Feb 15 that there was a need to protect children from fast-changing digital risks.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Google Preferred Source badge

British Prime Minister Keir Starmer will seek broader powers to regulate internet access, which he said on Feb 15 are needed to protect children from fast-changing digital risks.

Britain’s government said in January that it would consult on an Australian-style

social media ban for those under 16

.

Spain, Greece and Slovenia have since said they plan bans.

“Technology is moving really fast, and the law has got to keep up,” Mr Starmer said in a statement.

The new powers are likely to lead to reduced parliamentary scrutiny of future curbs.

Mr Starmer’s office said this was required so that after the review, “we can act fast on its findings within months, rather than waiting years for new primary legislation every time technology evolves”.

More artificial intelligence (AI) chatbots will also be covered by a ban on creating sexualised images without the subject’s consent, after measures against Mr Elon Musk’s Grok, the government said.

These will be introduced as an amendment to existing crime and child-protection legislation being considered by Parliament.

While aimed at shielding children, such measures often have knock-on implications for adults’ privacy and ability to access services and have led to tension with the US over limits on free speech and regulatory reach.

Websites such as the image-hosting site Imgur – used to make memes and provide images for many general online discussion forums – blocked access to all British users in 2025 and gave them blank images instead after tighter age-verification rules were introduced.

Some major pornography websites have also blocked access for British users rather than verify their age, which they said was invasive of privacy and potentially insecure.

But such geographic restrictions can be circumvented by using readily available virtual private networks (VPNs), and the British government said its consultation on child safety would include potential age restrictions for VPNs.

REUTERS

See more on