Why a proposed bill aiming to prevent kids from accessing porn sites is raising privacy concerns - Action News
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Why a proposed bill aiming to prevent kids from accessing porn sites is raising privacy concerns

An independent senator is sponsoring a law that would required porn websitestoimplement some kind of age verification mechanism toprotect minors from exposure to online pornography. Critics say that wouldbe ineffective and would raise significant privacy and freedom of expression issues.

Bill would require porn websites to implement age verification mechanisms

A photo of Pornhub's website. The thumbnails of videos are blurred.
An independent senator is sponsoring a law that would required porn websitestoimplement some kind of age verification mechanism toprotect minors from exposure to online pornography. Critics say that wouldbe ineffective and would raise significant privacy and freedom of expression issues. (Althea Manasan/CBC)

Forthose 15-year-olds looking to purchase adultmagazines at a local variety store, the currentCanadian law prevents thattransaction, limiting the sale of such sexually explicit materialto those 18 years of age and older.

It's that kind of regulation that independentSen.Julie Miville-Dechne says she just wants to bring to the online world.

"Themain goal of this bill is to reproduce in the virtual world what already exists in terms ofprotecting the children from exposure to porninreal life," shesaid in a phone interview.

The proposed law, titled An Act To Restrict Young Persons' Online Access ToSexually Explicit Material, and sponsored by Miville-Dechne, would requireporn websitestoimplement some kind of age verification mechanism toprotect minors from exposure to online pornography.

"The idea that a kid who's 11, nine, 10can open his phone, watch all this porn isa public healthissue," she said.

The proposed legislation passed the Senate in spring and, this past week,second reading in the House of Commons with support from the Conservatives, NDP and Bloc. It will now be sent to committeefor further study.

However, most of theLiberal MPs voted against the proposed bill, as the government has been working on its own online harms bill.

'This is censorship'

The act's critics say the proposed legislation wouldbe ineffective, and wouldraise significant privacy and freedom of expression issues.

"This is censorship," said Michael Geist, a University of Ottawa law professor, who is also theCanada Research Chair ininternet and e-commerce law.

Herecently outlined his concerns about the proposed legislation in a recent blog post.

"This [proposed law] really does talk about blocking lawful content," Geist said.

Although Bill S-210 would require adult websites to verify users' ages, it does not specify how. Options could include a digital ID system or services that can estimate age based on a webcam scan of a user's face.

Adult websites that don't verify ages would face fines of up to $250,000 on their first offence.

Sen. Julie Miville-Dechne says a law requiring brands to monitor their supply chains and report on their findings would put pressure on companies to take more action to prevent reputational damage.
Sen. Julie Miville-Dechne says the main goal of her proposed bill is to reproduce in the virtual world what already exists in the 'real' world in terms ofprotecting children from exposure to porn. (Submitted by Julie Miville-Dechne)

The bill would require age verification methods that arereliable, protect user privacy and personal information, collect and use personalinformation solely for verificationpurposes and any personal information would be destroyed,Miville-Dechnesa

She said porn sites could use third party companies thatare independent, accredited andexperts in age verification.

"So the kid arriveson a porn platform.tries to go in, isautomatically directed to a third party age verifier," she said.

'Absolutely possible to respect privacy'

Miville-Dechnesaid other jurisdictions around the world, including Germany, France, the United Kingdom and some U.S. states, are either exploring or have implemented age verification systems to porn sites.

"It's absolutely possible to respect privacy of consumers of pornography and at the same time protect children," she said.

Miville-Dechne has received support for the proposed legislation from some advocacy groups, including theCanadian Centre for Child Protection.

Signy Arnason, the organization's associate executive director, said they are supportive of the objective of the bill, and that ideally,age verification would occur as part of a comprehensive online safety overhaul.

"From our perspective it is reasonable for the government to impose stricter requirements on websites/companies who wish to make higher-risk content available to Canadians, and to penalize those who refuse to comply with our laws, just as we do in other industries," Arnason said in a statement to CBC News.

Arnason said that Canadians alreadyaccept that they mustprovide proof of identity or age when consuming products they access online, and that this verification occurs in most cases by virtue of being a credit card holder.

"We certainly hope that any legislation that aims to keep explicit online content away from children trickles down into other web services even if they are not solely focused on pornography."

'Fundamentally flawed'

OnThursday, the heritage minister's office said Miville-Dechne's proposed legislation is "fundamentally flawed."

"Experts have loudly pointed to the serious issues in this proposal around issues of privacy, security, and technology," it said in a statement.

Michael Geist is a law professor at the University of Ottawa and Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law.
Michael Geist, a law professor at the University of Ottawa and Canada Research Chair in internet and e-commerce law, said the law, if passed, would be censorship. (Submitted by Michael Geist)

Those experts include Geist, who spoke out against the proposed bill during his own Senatecommittee appearance last year.

He disagreed that the age verification process would be just a minor inconvenience, that it would certainly require facial recognition that links the individual to the site and that the providers likely won't be located in Canada.

"It is hardly the equivalent of flashing your driver's licence at a store owner," he said. "It is significant."

Geist said the way the law is drafted, it captures a wide range of sites that might also include pornographic images, such as Twitter or Google.

"The notion that we would need age verification to access, frankly, general purpose sites like search engines and social media sites strikes me as enormously problematic," he said.

Geist said if a site is found to not be complying, a court order can be issued that would mandate Canadian ISPs block the site from their subscribers. That means lawful content on the website, that includes other material that is not sexually explicit,could be blocked for those over 18, material "they are lawfully entitled to access," he said.

He said minors should be prevented from accessing such sites through education, parental responsibility, and other filtering systems that are available.

Val Webber,, a former performer in the adult industry anda post-doctoral researcher at Dalhousie University in pornography, sexual and public health, said that these kinds ff age verification proposals are ineffective.
Val Webber, a former performer in the adult industry anda post-doctoral researcher at Dalhousie University, said that these kinds of age verification proposals are ineffective. (Dalhousie University)

Val Webber,a former performer in the adult industry anda post-doctoral researcher in pornography, sexual and public health at Dalhousie University, said suchage verification proposals are ineffective.

Webber is also on the advisory board ofEthical Capital Partners, the Ottawa-based private-equity firm that recently purchased the parent company of one of the most popular, yetcontroversial, adult websites in the world: Pornhub.

Webber said these age verification legislative proposalswon't stop minors from accessing adult content because young people will simply use a virtual private network (VPN) to circumvent any location-specific age requirements ormove to sites that are not legally compliant.

Creates new avenues for identity theft

As well, they saidthere areimmenseprivacy risksentailed by having to submit government ID to every adult website accessed.

"It creates new avenues for identity theft,phishingscams, blackmail, and so forth," Webbersaid.

Webber said that device-level filters are the best way to prevent youth from accessing adult content, but that studies show very few parents use these.

Aylo, Pornhub's parent company, said that whileit has publiclysupported age verificationfor years, the way many jurisdictions worldwide have chosen to implement it is"ineffective, haphazard, and dangerous."

"Any regulations that require hundreds of thousands of adult sites to collect significant amounts of highly sensitive personal information is putting user safety in jeopardy," the company said in a statement to CBC News.

It said that in Louisiana, for example, a state thathas implementedan age verification law, Pornhub's traffic has dropped 80 per cent.

"These people did not stop looking for porn. They just migrated to darker corners of the internet that don't ask users to verify age, that don't follow the law, that don't take user safety seriously, and that often don't even moderate content," Pornhub'sstatement said.

"In practice, the laws have just made the internet more dangerous for adults and children."

With files from The Canadian Press

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