• Proton, Tor, Mullvad, ExpressVPN, and Mozilla among the 19 organi

    From TechnologyDaily@1337:1/100 to All on Tuesday, May 05, 2026 15:15:25
    Proton, Tor, Mullvad, ExpressVPN, and Mozilla among the 19 organizations urging the UK government 'not to undermine the open web' as Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill becomes law a move that could 'infringe human rights'

    Date:
    Tue, 05 May 2026 14:12:38 +0000

    Description:
    The Act introduces new online restrictions for young people, alongside an obligation for service providers to take "reasonable anti-circumvention measures." Here's why privacy raises the alarm.

    FULL STORY ======================================================================Copy link Facebook X Whatsapp Reddit Pinterest Flipboard Threads Email Share this article 0 Join the conversation Follow us Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter Privacy tech advocates are urging the UK "not to undermine the open web " This comes as the Childrens Wellbeing and Schools bill became law A national consultation on online harms is also ongoing A coalition made up of digital rights groups and
    privacy-first tech developers is urging the UK government "not to undermine the open web."

    Nineteen organizations, including some of the best VPN services Proton, Mullvad, ExpressVPN , and IPVanish Mozilla, the Tor Project, and privacy advocates, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, published an open letter on Tuesday (May 5) to directly address policymakers. The coalition warns that, while trying to address pressing questions on children's safety and online harms, UK policymakers are pursuing "blunt policy interventions," including banning access to some online services. You may like UK governments child safety plans could expose kids to 'greater harms,' warns VPN industry group UK government may 'age restrict or limit childrens VPN use' following three-month consultation 'No approach is a silver bullet' UK launches online safety consultation that could see VPNs age-restricted

    These measures, according to the signatories, "will do little to improve
    young peoples experiences online, and instead undermine the web and infringe on human rights."

    The outcry comes as the controversial Childrens Wellbeing and Schools bill became law last week. The Act introduces fresh new online restrictions for young people, alongside an obligation for service providers to take "reasonable anti-circumvention measures."

    The government also launched a national consultation on online harms open until May 26, 2026 arguing that VPNs may be age-restricted if the consultation found these tools guilty of undermining online safety protections. Children's Wellbeing and Schools Act: why experts are worried (Image credit: Getty Images) Under the Children's Wellbeing and Schools Act, the Secretary of State will now have the authority to introduce regulations that compel internet service providers to prevent or limit children's access to specific services or functionalities. These restrictions may include screentime, location sharing, and more.

    According to digital rights and privacy tech experts, such an approach is flawed as it fails to ensure online services are designed to uphold
    children's rights and interests by default.

    Furthermore, experts believe that access restrictions could endanger the privacy and security of all internet users by requiring everyone to verify their ages.

    "Existing age assurance technologies are either insufficiently accurate, undermine privacy and data security, or are not widely available across populations," the letter reads, with the experts warning that age
    verification mandates could also "risk cementing the dominance" of Big Tech giants. What to read next I took the UK's online safety survey here are the red flags every privacy advocate should know Mullvad VPN takes its banned anti-surveillance ad to the streets after UK TV rejection "Protecting
    children online is a parental responsibility, not a regulatory one" the VPN industry reacts to Government VPN spending amid discussions on restricting child VPN use

    This is not the first time the privacy tech world has raised the alarm
    against widespread age verification laws.

    Last week, Proton's CEO and Founder Andy Yen deemed the global age verification push " the death of anonymity online ." Earlier in March, over 400 scientists also called for a halt to mandatory age verification until there's "scientific consensus" that such a practice doesn't create more harm than good. The "VPN loophole" Beyond age verification and new online restrictions, the signtorires are especially worried about the effort to
    close what's been deemed the "VPN loophole." That's the idea that VPN
    services are used as a circumvention tool to bypass mandatory age checks.

    VPNs, however, are essential privacy and security tools that people use every day to mitigate online harms. "Restricting the use of privacy-preserving technologies undermines efforts to empower users to navigate the web safely and to develop digital literacy," said Mozilla.

    Despite the Lord's initial idea of an outright ban on VPNs for children not ending up in the final text, the Act still includes an obligation for service providers to take "reasonable anti-circumvention measures."

    The fate of VPNs hasn't been decided yet, either. New restrictions could be introduced following the ongoing online safety consultation.

    On April 23, the VPN Trust Initiative published a statement warning UK lawmakers that VPN restrictions could expose kids to "greater harms." Other groups, including Mozilla, are set to share further stances in the coming days. Today's best VPN deals NordVPN 2 Year 2.59 /mth View +3 months free Surfshark 24 Months 1.49 /mth View Proton VPN 24 Month 2.39 /mth View +4 MONTHS FREE ExpressVPN 24 month 1.99 /mth View We check over 250 million products every day for the best prices Follow TechRadar on Google News and
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    Link to news story: https://www.techradar.com/vpn/vpn-privacy-security/proton-tor-mullvad-expressv pn-and-mozilla-among-the-19-organizations-urging-the-uk-government-not-to-unde rmine-the-open-web-as-childrens-wellbeing-and-schools-bill-becomes-law-a-move- that-could-infringe-human-rights


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