Why the Online Safety Act Still Matters Grass Monster, June 18, 2025June 18, 2025 GRASSMONSTER SAYS: Article Title: “The Internet Watchdog With Teeth: Why the Online Safety Act Still Matters”By @grassmonster It may not be making headlines this week, but make no mistake – the Online Safety Act is still growling in the background, ready to sink its teeth into tech giants and trolls alike. First passed in 2023, this landmark UK law is still one of the toughest digital safety rules in the world. And in an age where your child’s smartphone is more dangerous than your garden shed, that matters. Here’s the blunt version: if a social media platform or tech firm allows harmful, illegal, or predatory content to spread on its site – it’s legally accountable. Not just morally. Not just in a PR statement. Legally. And guess who’s holding the leash? Ofcom – now with real powers to fine, investigate, and regulate platforms like TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, and whatever app your grandkids are already addicted to. The Act’s core priority is protecting children online. Sites must swiftly remove material involving child abuse, suicide encouragement, harassment, and non-consensual images. It also cracks down on scam ads, deepfakes, and dodgy algorithms that feed kids a cocktail of body shame, violence, and fake “wellness cures.” Of course, critics shout “censorship!” and claim the law chills free speech. But the law doesn’t ban opinions – it bans harm. And frankly, if a billionaire-run platform can’t be bothered to keep a 12-year-old safe, it shouldn’t be in business here. The Online Safety Act also gives you more power. Better reporting tools. More transparency. A right to know why content is removed or left up. A legal route if the platforms ignore you. It’s not perfect – tech moves faster than Parliament’s tea trolley – but the law is here, alive, and still biting. And in a digital world where profit often trumps protection, that’s no small thing.Author: @grassmonster#OnlineSafetyAct #ChildProtection #DigitalRights #TechRegulation #OfcomWatchdog #UKLaw #GrassmonsterReports Related Posts:From Tragedy to DutyCourt Says Sex Means SexSTILL LEAKING FILTHData, Cookies, and Power - UK’s New Digital LawToo Hot to Work?UK Closes Legal Loophole on Child Rape CasesBig Venues Must Prepare for Terror ThreatsMPs Move to Ban Websites That Promote Prostitution X-ARTICLES