August 1, 2025
3 mins read

Ofcom probes 34 porn sites over age verification

Ofcom says some sites may be ignoring its new rules – designed to stop children stumbling across porn or other content deemed harmful by lawmakers…reports Asian Lite News

Ofcom is investigating four companies, operating a total of 34 porn sites, over whether they are complying with its new age check requirements. The regulator said on Friday more than 6,000 sites allowing pornography and other adult content would start using “highly effective” tools to verify or estimate whether users were over or under the age of 18.

But Ofcom says some sites may be ignoring its new rules – designed to stop children stumbling across porn or other content deemed harmful by lawmakers. It has opened formal probes into 8579 LLC, AVS Group Ltd, Kick Online Entertainment S.A. and Trendio Ltd, which it says have more than nine million monthly visitors combined across their sites. “These companies have been prioritised based on the risk of harm posed by the services they operate and their user numbers,” Ofcom said in a press release on Thursday.

The regulator is already investigating a range of platforms over similar suspicions. It previously opened probes into online message board 4chan and porn provider First Time Videos LLC in June.

Prior to that it launched formal investigations into an online suicide forum, file-sharing services and a company that runs a so-called “nudifying” site. “We expect to make further enforcement announcements in the coming weeks and months,” the regulator said.

Technology Secretary Peter Kyle welcomed the announcement and said it “goes to the very heart of what the Online Safety Act is here to do”. “These laws have nothing to do with censorship or policing adults seeking to access legal content,” he said.

“Those who suggest otherwise are playing politics with child safety and have no practical alternatives for protecting our children from content they should never see – content that can cause lasting, even fatal, damage.”

Since age verification requirements took effect on Friday, people in the UK have been asked to confirm their age across a range of different platforms including social media platforms Reddit and X. Spotify confirmed on Wednesday that it may prompt people in the UK, among other locations including Australia, to confirm their age if accessing music videos rated 18+ by uploaders.

The sweeping rules have prompted a backlash from some who see the requirements as an overreach or potential privacy concern. More than 400,000 people have now signed a petition calling for the repeal of the Online Safety Act – the law requiring age checks to stop children encountering adult content.

The government said in response it has no plans to withdraw the law. Some have also criticised the effectiveness of Ofcom’s implementation of UK age check requirements, and their potential circumvention using virtual private networks.

Apps providing free VPNs – which allow people to disguise their location online, in order to access the web from a different location – topped free app download charts on Apple’s App Store after the rules came into effect on Friday.

Ofcom has defended the measures as no “silver bullet” but said they will help make the internet safer for children by reducing the chance of them “stumbling across porn”.

Ofcom, which estimates about 14 million people watch online pornography in the UK, says tougher age checks will make it harder for children to stumble across harmful material online. But are the new rules set out in the Online Safety Act watertight, or will people be able to find ways around them? Which sites will check your age?

Ofcom, the media regulator, has set out a number of ways websites can verify the age of users, including through credit card checks, photo ID matching and estimating age using a selfie. It says thousands of sites have committed to age checks. Whatever format platforms choose, they must be “technically accurate, robust, reliable and fair”.

Some sites that host sexually explicit content have already committed to introducing age checks. But Ofcom says they must also take action over methods people might use to get around checks.

Previous Story

Channel migrant total hits 25,000 in July

Next Story

Nursing leaders warn govt 

Latest from -Top News

Pakistan in the Dark: Power Crisis Boils Over

Regular power outages are a fact of life in Pakistan, but recent developments suggest that the situation is escalating to new extremes….writes Nasir Khattak In early January 2025, a nerve-breaking power outage

IBPC Dubai charts new growth path

Former Tata Motors CEO Ravi Kant headlines exclusive event as Indian business council sets course for transformation….reports Asian Lite News The Indian Business & Professional Council (IBPC) Dubai has signalled a significant

Miles in the Malls!

Dubai Mallathon kicks off today – The emirate’s biggest malls transform into indoor fitness arenas, inviting residents to walk, run, and win — all while staying cool, healthy, and community-connected….reports Asian Lite

Famine grips Gaza, WHO warns

WHO said Gaza’s population is facing acute food insecurity under the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification…reports Asian Lite News The World Health Organisation (WHO) has issued its starkest warning yet about the

Lifeline from UAE to Gaza

UAE’s Operation Chivalrous Knight 3 sustains Gaza’s collapsing health system with hospitals, treatment, aid, and vaccines, offering vital relief to thousands amid deepening crisis….reports Asian Lite News The United Arab Emirates has
Go toTop

Don't Miss

Rheinmetall unveils UK’s upgraded Challenger 3 battle tank

Rheinmetall is upgrading the tank in a joint venture with

Govt appoints first nature envoy to tackle species decline

Ruth Davis, the new special representative for nature, is in