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Signal to exit UK if Online Safety Bill harms encryption

Messaging app Signal has said it will stop UK operations if the upcoming Online Safety Bill compromises encryption standards.

Speaking to the BBC, president Meredith Whittaker said the signal app “would absolutely, 100% walk”. UKTN has reached out to Signal for comment.

The Online Safety Bill, which had its second reading on 1 February, would give Ofcom additional powers to reduce the amount of harmful content on the internet.

“Signal are right to push back against his measure, which is the thin end of a wedge when it comes to wider surveillance of private communications. It would likely require a backdoor, open for malicious actors as well as the government,” said Joshua Long, head of communication at Mojeek.

“Unfortunately, Silicon Valley’s own techno-solutionism seems to have crossed the pond, and now has devoted supporters in Westminster.”

The bill us currently awaiting scrutiny at the Committee stage, with a date yet to be announced.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak last month modified the Online Safety Bill to make executives from technology companies criminally accountable if the social media platforms they run repeatedly fail to protect children from harm.

Kent-based Comparitech’s security specialist Brian Higgins said: “Every platform will strike the balance they are most comfortable with and, once the legislative dust has settled, we’ll see where the market shifts. It’s a bold statement by Signal. I’m not sure others will be quite so firm in their stance.”

It was first brought into Parliament in March last year following years of discussion and setbacks.

Signal is a secure nonprofit privacy messaging app based in San Francisco, California.

The post Signal to exit UK if Online Safety Bill harms encryption appeared first on UKTN | UK Tech News.

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