@neil This is another part I think we will see a early court challenge too, likely by vpn providers if Ofcom starts doing that. Because it means sites removing ads and Youtube removing sponsorships.

If Ofcom end up telling sites to remove any talk of VPNs for everyone that clearly violates Article 10 of ECHR and not even apart of the law.

@neil but if I’m a category 1 provider, I have a duty to protect the sharing of journalistic content published by an established news provider on a matter of democratic importance like… a BBC News article that does not explicitly encourage the use of any mechanism to avoid age checks but discusses how many people are now finding workarounds in the context of the debate the law is prompting.

Every website owner should be able to balance those extremely clear obligations.

@revk @neil There's illegal, and there's Illegal.

Fun fact, torproject.org was blocked on virgin media (with child filter turned on), and several VPN provider websites are also blocked, last time I checked. Probably same on other ISPs.

The issue isn't tech, this is political; it's creating a precedent that says it's OK for the government to decide what you should read and shouldn't read.

I already wrote to my MP asking her to campaign to have the Act repealed, and I got the usual run-around.