26-10-2025, 13:28
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#1501
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: Hiding . . from all the experts
Posts: 4,457
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hugh
It allowed me to put one in the basket with no further checks…
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Stephen
Well obviously. The checks are done at point of delivery.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Hugh
From above…
It was in reference to that…
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Out of (scant) interest, and maybe to clear something up . . . did you try to buy the knife Hugh, or just put it in the basket and not follow on to checkout?
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“You get a wonderful view from the point of no return.” ~ T. Pratchett
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26-10-2025, 15:58
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#1502
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laeva recumbens anguis
Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Jun 2006
Age: 68
Services: Premiere Collection
Posts: 43,797
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Just put it in the basket…
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If my post is in bold and this colour, it's a Moderator Request.
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26-10-2025, 19:31
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#1503
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 10,768
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Just asked him and he said that the issue about age verification arose when he tried to check out.
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26-10-2025, 21:37
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#1504
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cf.addict
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: SE London (Bexley)
Services: None - well none with VM!
Posts: 247
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Well this was always going to happen eventually wasn’t it?
But basically the site 4Chan (OK, fine, not the most salubrious site on the internet), have been fined some £20k by OFCOM plus £100 per day until they comply for not having any sort of age verification, and/or coughing up their (non existent) ‘illegal harms risk assessment'.
Except 4Chan’s lawyers have stated they have no intention of paying, will refuse to pay, OFCOM and the UK Government can basically ‘do one’.
So what happens now? Does OFCOM apply to the Courts to block them? Well that won’t go down well and I suspect that 'the Donald' will have something to say.
I suspect nothing will happen and the OSA will be exposed as the complete toothless paper-tiger that it is. Yes it might well shut down a few minor sites, steam train enthusiast, knitting sites which have a forum and so technically fall under the OSA umbrella, but are far too small to have a formal risk assessment or be able to age verify people.
But there we go, eventually OFCOM will publish figures showing that they ‘successfully shut down x hundred of offending sites - they’ll be the aforementioned steam train enthusiast sites - while the real problems are left running.
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"I believe in an open mind, but not so open that your brains fall out"
Arthur Hays Sulzberger
Last edited by jem; 26-10-2025 at 21:51.
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26-10-2025, 21:56
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#1505
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Grumpy Fecker
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Warrington
Age: 65
Services: Every Weekend
Posts: 16,998
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hom3r
This prove my age is beyond a joke, XBL is the latest I've been there since 2006 and pay for access by a credit card.
Yet will OFCOM allow me a 56 year old to watch 18+ stuff anytime I want NO
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I use an Xbox one as a media player for plex, Netflix and prime and i am being pestered to prove my age by microsoft via system messages.
It just proves that the implementation of the online safety bill is not understood at all and that the designers of the system need to go back to the drawing board. That is of course after they leave infants and progress to high school.
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So you all voted for Labour and now you are shocked they resort to stabbing the pensioners and disabled in the back. Shame on you.
Online Safety Bill, The scammers new target.
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26-10-2025, 22:00
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#1506
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Dr Pepper Addict
Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Nottingham
Age: 62
Services: IDNet FTTP (1000M), Sky Q TV, Sky Mobile, Flextel SIP
Posts: 30,018
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by jem
Except 4Chan’s lawyers have stated they have no intention of paying, will refuse to pay, OFCOM and the UK Government can basically ‘do one’.
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Personally I wish all of them would, and show what a joke this act is.
Atm, I suspect some other sites will, as they begin to realise the UK simply has no jurisdiction over them.
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Baby, I was born this way.
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Yesterday, 23:08
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#1507
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 10,768
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
A representative of the company that owns Pornhub was on the news earlier and she said that visits to porn sites had plummeted.
She went on to say that they, as a company, always comply with the local jurisdiction of each country that they operate in and that, as a result of the OSA, people are:either no longer using porn sites, were using a VPN or are accessing porn sites abroard that don't comply with UK law. Though Ofcom are currently investigating such sites, she is concerned that, in the meantime, these sites may have inappropriate or illegal pornography available to view.
Finally, she said that they didn't have a problem with measures to protect children, but that the age verification system wasn't working because people were reluctant to provide personal details to a porn site that they didn't necessarily trust to keep their details secure or who could be hacked.
To deal with this she suggested that all phones should be sold without the ability to access adult sites, until the owner had proved that they were 18 or over.
Last edited by RichardCoulter; Yesterday at 23:14.
Reason: FAC NAS spelling
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Today, 01:57
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#1508
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Dr Pepper Addict
Cable Forum Team
Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Nottingham
Age: 62
Services: IDNet FTTP (1000M), Sky Q TV, Sky Mobile, Flextel SIP
Posts: 30,018
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by RichardCoulter
A representative of the company that owns Pornhub was on the news earlier and she said that visits to porn sites had plummeted.
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No, visits directly identifiable as being from the UK had plummeted.
Everyone is now using VPNs, which get logged as being from somewhere other than the UK.
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Baby, I was born this way.
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Today, 10:11
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#1509
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Sep 2007
Location: warrington
Age: 39
Services: Tivo, 100mb, Mobile
Posts: 1,493
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul
No, visits directly identifiable as being from the UK had plummeted.
Everyone is now using VPNs, which get logged as being from somewhere other than the UK.
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Exactly, although the clowns in Government keep saying that "Banning VPN's is not off the table" and whilst they could do it, it would be political suicide and would guarantee that Labour never get elected again.
As it is I have just wiped my Unraid Server after backing up some stuff on it, and once that server is backup, the Dell R430 server I have is going to have Proxmox installed on it, with multiple self hosted things such as VPN, Router, Password Manager, "Cloud" storage for phone, Family Image hosting etc etc.
I am also getting closer to ripping windows off my pc, it's getting more and more annoying.
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 7900X3D, 64Gb Corsair 6000Mhz, Gigabyte Aorus RTX 4080 Super, Samsung 980 Pro 2Tb NVME
Unraid Server, 130TB Supermicro CSE-846, AMD Epyc 7551P 32 Core, 64Gb ECC DDR4, nVidia RTX A2000
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Today, 10:25
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#1510
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Apr 2004
Location: Northampton
Services: Virgin Media TV&BB 350Mb,
V6 STB
Posts: 8,161
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by nffc
EU Law could never be automatically bound into UK law but there was always basically an agreement that it would, after Brexit any existing EU legislation was either converted into UK law or repealed. Anything they do now simply doesn't apply unless our Parliament could do the same.
Even when we were in the EU only the UK parliament could make laws.
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Not true. Directives had to be passed in each of the member countries, but Regulations automatically applied. That is why there had to be a "cut and paste" of EU regulations into UK law, because they weren't part of UK law beforehand. The only part of UK law was that EU regulations automatically applied.
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Today, 12:02
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#1511
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cf.mega poster
Join Date: Jul 2004
Location: chavvy Nottingham
Age: 41
Services: Freeview, Sky+, 100 Mb/s VM BB, mega i7 PC, iPhone 13, Macbook Air
Posts: 7,451
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Re: Online Safety Bill Etc
Quote:
Originally Posted by nomadking
Not true. Directives had to be passed in each of the member countries, but Regulations automatically applied. That is why there had to be a "cut and paste" of EU regulations into UK law, because they weren't part of UK law beforehand. The only part of UK law was that EU regulations automatically applied.
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Yes, and how exactly was the EU regulations applied into UK law?
Parliament took the regulation and made an Act of Parliament...
So they were still making the legislation, or someone else had been given the powers to use secondary legislation.
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