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by VLM
4754 days ago
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"Secondly Claire Perry isn't really anyone of note, and certainly doesn't have the power to force this through on her own." I quote the fifth line of the article: "As ISPs are voluntarily rolling out filtering technology, it will require no new legislation or regulations." I'm curious how this works politically in the UK. My limited understanding of the issue is pr0n censoring is a purely protestant religion hot button mostly in the US, and the relationship between church and state in the UK is the opposite from the US, where we pretend they're separate and pretend not to let our clerics rule us, however with a nod and wink that our neocon party is pretty much the political wing of our evang church and they're pretty activist, in the UK they've got a state religion where the clerics directly rule them, but they take a much more hands off approach than the USA such that they meet the criteria for figurehead-hood. Or is their particular brand of church/state merger more like liberation theology which would be a bit more leftie explaining why .uk has a civilized healthcare system but the .us does not. All of this speculation could of course be wrong, which is why I ask any .uk folks (or people that understand .uk folks) how this all works politically in the .uk. For example is pr0n opposition a primarily evangelical religious issue like in the states, or how much teeth do your clerics have over your .gov, or is this manufactured news to get on TV as a stunt, or manufactured news to get the neocons in .us excited as the local population yawns/laughs... It sounds from the "no new legislation" line much like if the FCC declared a ruling in the USA, no legislation required or permitted, but that doesn't mean its not going to be vigorously enforced. |
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Often in the UK the first pass at regulation will be inviting the main companies in an industry to form a voluntary self-regulation body and come up with their own code of conduct. It's generally in the industry's interest to do this as legislation is certain to be heavier-handed and less flexible; and it's in the government's interests as it needs less time, procedure and public debate. On the other hand, there are fewer opportunities for politicians to grandstand on the issue, and companies don't have to join the voluntary self-regulation body.
Even if industry self-regulation fails, it can take several years before it's clear it's failed, so this is also a way to kick things into the long grass on issues like the under-representation of women on the boards of large corporations.