Technology

UK’s Starmer seeks greater powers to regulate online access | Technology News

2 min readFeb 16, 2026 09:31 AM British Prime Miner Keir Starmer will seek broader powers to regulate internet access, which he said on Sunday was needed to protect children from fast-changing digital risks.
Britain’s government said last month it would consult on an Australian-style social media ban for children 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,” Starmer said in a statement.
The new powers are likely to lead to reduced parliamentary scrutiny of future curbs. 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 AI chatbots will also be covered a ban on creating sexualised images without the subject’s consent, after measures against Elon Musk’s Grok, the government said.
These will be introduced as an amendment to exing crime and child-protection legislation being considered ⁠ 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 ​U.S. over limits on free speech and ‌regulatory reach.Story continues below this ad
Websites such as image-hosting site Imgur, used to make memes and provide images for many general ‌online discussion forums, blocked ​access to ​all ​British users last year and gave them blank images instead, after tighter age-verification rules.
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.
However, such geographic restrictions ‌can be ⁠circumvented using readily available virtual private networks, and the British government said its consultation on ​child safety would include potential age restrictions for VPNs. 

Related Articles

Back to top button