There’s less than a month to go before online pornography becomes a lot harder to watch.
From July 25, porn sites available in the UK will have to perform stringent checks to ensure visitors are aged 18 or over.
In an attempt to stop children accessing porn, adults will have to submit ID or even have their face scanned, depending on what site they access.
Now, major porn providers have confirmed to online regular Ofcom that they will introduce these checks by next month’s deadline.
They are PornHub, the most-visited pornographic service in the UK, BoyfriendTV, Cam4, FrolicMe, inxxx, Jerkmate, LiveHDCams, MyDirtyHobby, RedTube, Streamate, Stripchat, Tube8 and YouPorn.
Ofcom said these 13 sites ‘are happy to be named at this stage’ and ‘represent a broad range of pornography services accessed in the UK’.
But other porn sites not on the list, such as XHamster and XVideos, have to comply with the rule too.
If any fails to do so, Ofcom can impose fines and in very serious cases apply for a court order to prevent the site or app from being available.

PornHub, the most-visited pornographic service in the UK, is just one website that’s agreed to online age checks from next month
According to Oliver Griffiths, Ofcom’s group director of online safety, making life safer online ‘is one of the defining challenges of our era’.
‘Society has long protected youngsters from products that aren’t suitable for them, from alcohol to smoking or gambling,’ he said.
‘But for too long children have been only a click away from harmful pornography online.
‘Now, change is happening. These age checks will bring pornography into line with how we treat adult services in the real world, without compromising access and privacy for over-18s.’
In terms of how the age checks would work, Ofcom has already listed seven methods that porn providers could use.
Ultimately, which one they opt for is their decision, not Ofcom’s, but their chosen method must be ‘highly effective’ at correctly determining if a user is under 18.
Ofcom’s seven suggested strategies are photo-ID matching, facial age estimation, mobile-network operator (MNO) age checks, credit card checks, email-based age estimation, digital identity services and open banking.
Open banking works by accessing the information a bank has on record regarding a user’s age, while photo-ID matching involves uploading a verified photo-ID document, like a PDF of a passport of driving licence.

Ofcom said these 13 sites ‘are happy to be named at this stage’ and ‘represent a broad range of pornography services accessed in the UK’
Facial age estimate works by analysing the features of a user’s face from a photo to work their age, while MNO age checks involve mobile-network operators applying age-restriction filters themselves.
Because you must be 18 to get a credit card in the UK, credit card checks are also listed as ‘highly effective’, as are email-based age estimations, which estimate your age based on other services where you’ve provided your email address.
‘The process can be as simple as submitting an email address and will return an accurate result in seconds,’ explained Lina Ghazal, head of regulatory and public affairs at safety tech firm Verifymy.
Ofcom added that many porn sites have already put their age checks in place, but others haven’t and now have less than a month to do so.
It stresses that the law applies to all sites and apps that allow pornography – whether they are dedicated adult sites or social media, search or gaming services.
Fines for non-comply could be up to £18 million or 10 per cent of the platform’s qualifying worldwide revenue, whichever is greater.
The crackdown is part of the Online Safety Act 2023 – a set of laws that protects children and adults online.
Mrs Ghazal said it is a ‘great step forward for child safety’, adding: ‘It means some of the world’s biggest sites will have highly effective age assurance in place that protects children and also preserves the privacy of users.’

They’re some of the most popular platforms in the world. But Brits will soon have to prove they’re over-18 to access porn sites across the UK (stock image)
The idea of implementing age checks on pornography websites, and fining those sites that don’t comply, has existed for several years now.
Back in 2016, the UK government launched a public consultation over plans to implement age checks on pornography sites.
It was then included in the Digital Economy Act 2017 – but the provision was delayed and eventually abandoned in October 2019.
Government said at the time age checks would be delivered through its ‘proposed online harms regulatory regime’ – in other words, the Online Safety Bill.
One criticism of age-checking technology for porn is regarding concerns about handing sensitive identification information – namely age or date of birth – to third parties.
‘Everyone realised right from the start – 2016 – that users were not going to want to share their name, let alone a copy of their passport or driving licence, with a porn site,’ said Iain Corby, director of Age Verification Providers Association.
This article was originally published by a www.dailymail.co.uk . Read the Original article here. .