Why do legislators keep failing victims in online harms?

Authors: Phippen, A. and Bond, E.

Journal: International Review of Law, Computers and Technology

eISSN: 1364-6885

ISSN: 1360-0869

DOI: 10.1080/13600869.2023.2295100

Abstract:

Online harms policy debates, and subsequent legislation, take, as their starting point, a prohibitive perspective which assumes that harms that occur online can be prevented, and, because they are facilitated with digital technology, they can be prevented with such. By exploring current debates around the pinnacle of online harms legislation in the UK, the Online Safety Bill, we propose that this prohibitive mindset, along with a failure to appreciate online harms as a social ill, rather than a technical one, will emerged poorly developed without a victim centric focus. In exploring the development of legislation around the non-consensual sharing of intimate images, we illustrate the failures in victim centric policy development, and argue that there are many parallels with the ‘war of drugs’ and the failures to tackle these social problems with prohibitive legislation, and suggest there is much to learn from these issues should policy makers care to look.

Source: Scopus