Press Release
7/23/2013
On
Monday, British Prime Minister David Cameron announced new measures
that their government was taking to protect children. Prime Minister
Cameron emphasized the two primary aims of these measures: to protect
children from exposure to adult pornography through an Internet Service
Provider (ISP) based filter and to tackle the magnitude of child sex
abuse images online.
I
applaud Prime Minister Cameron for his bold approach to work with
Internet Service Providers to develop solutions to protect children. In
this massive fight against child exploitation and the sexualisation of
our children, every step we take makes a difference.
Harmful impact of pornography on children
Eliminating
the easy access to pornography by children should be a common sense
approach. There is much research that reveals the harmful implications
of youth who are exposed to pornography. (It is shocking that the
average age of first exposure to pornography is 12 years old.) For
example, viewing of pornography is seen as a causative factor in child
on child sexual abuse. Additionally, recent studies reveal that regular
viewing of pornography can actually rewire the brain. For children, who
are in a critical stage of physical development, this is alarming and
can carry long term negative consequences.
Addressing Censorship
However,
since expressing my support for Britain’s plan, I have been astounded
at the immediate, uniformed accusations of censorship, anti-freedom,
government surveillance made by people who have not taken time to
actually understand the issues being addressed and the solutions being
proposed.
The
purpose of the ISP based filter on adult pornography is not to block or
censor pornography from adults, but to block it from children.
Accusations of censorship are as ludicrous as suggesting that
prohibiting the sale of adult videos to children is censorship.
Anyone
over 18 in the UK would still have full control or their access to
legal pornography. British ISPs have developed a filter to block legal
adult pornography and this will be applied to all customers unless they
choose to turn it off. And turning it off will be as simple as logging
into your ISP account and unchecking a box.
Some
have also pointed out that home based filters are available. Indeed
they are, but the software is only effective on the computers they are
installed on. In an age of wireless home networks, when many children
have smartphones, and friends with smartphones, having an
anti-pornography filter installed on your home computer is useless.
Government Partnership - Not Regulation
The
UK’s plan has also been characterized as an example of big government
intruding on industry. Rather than imposing regulations on the ISP’s,
the filter was a product of consultation and partnership between the
government and UK’s biggest ISPs to develop a means of protecting
children from being exposed to adult content on line. That is what I
would like to see in Canada: partnership and consultation between the
federal government, internet service providers, and stakeholders. It is a
conversation truly worth having.
I
firmly believe in protecting rights and freedoms, democracy and open
internet. As Prime Minister David Cameron rightly pointed out, “A free
and open internet is vital …But when it comes to the internet in the
balance between freedom and responsibility, we have neglected our
responsibility to our children.”
Surely, unchecking a box cannot be too much of a price to pay when it comes to protecting and nurturing our children.
Joy Smith, B.Ed., M.Ed.
Member of Parliament
Kildonan - St. Paul
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