The monetising of minors has got us Teched-Off say campaigners

Like a chief whip in the House of Commons, Totogi's CPS is 'democratising' data, by finding out if a customer is voting with their feet and then helping them to change their minds.

Online Safety Bill latest 

The government agreed to toughen a proposed law with an amendment to the long-delayed Online Safety Bill which proposes jail sentences of up to two years for tech bosses for failing to protect children from content such as child abuse and self- harm. Technology executives could be jailed if they โ€œconsent or conniveโ€ to ignoring the new rules, according to a report in Reuters.

Child safety activist Teched-Off has stepped up the pressure on Online Abuse legislators, releasing YouGov research that indicates that most parents (78%) arenโ€™t fully confident theyโ€™ve set adequate controls on their childrenโ€™s devices, with 11% failing set any controls at all. Of the parents who havenโ€™t set controls, 38% havenโ€™t done so because they find them too confusing.

With children receiving their first phone at increasingly young ages, they are being lured into a world in which premature sexualisation is a danger. A parallel study by Teched Off found that 80% of parents are worried that their child/children is/are addicted to a device. โ€œWeโ€™ve let tech organisations monetise our childrenโ€™s attention and [they] are paying a profound price,โ€ said Teched-Off founder Miranda Wilson, โ€œTikTok, Instagram, SnapChat and YouTube revenues are all in the billions in no small part thanks to us parents losing control.โ€

Britain, like the European Union, has been grappling to protect social media users, and in particular children, from harmful content without damaging free speech. The UK bill was originally designed to create one of the toughest regimes for regulating platforms such as Facebook, Instagram, TikTok and YouTube. It aimed to make companies stamp out illegal content on their sites, such as revenge pornography and encouraging suicide.

Industry body techUK said threatening executives with jail would not help deliver an effective regime to protect children, but it would damage Britainโ€™s digital economy. The billโ€™s โ€˜teethโ€™ will ensure compliance, it said, but the significant legal jeopardy for firms would make Britain a less attractive destination for investors.