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One of Jisc’s activities is to monitor and, where possible, influence regulatory developments that affect us and our customer universities, colleges and schools as operators of large computer networks. Since Janet and its customer networks are classified by Ofcom as private networks, postings here are likely to concentrate on the regulation of those networks. Postings here are, to the best of our knowledge, accurate on the date they are made, but may well become out of date or unreliable at unpredictable times thereafter. Before taking action that may have legal consequences, you should talk to your own lawyers. NEW: To help navigate the many posts on the General Data Protection Regulation, I've classified them as most relevant to developing a GDPR compliance process, GDPR's effect on specific topics, or how the GDPR is being developed. Or you can just use my free GDPR project plan.

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Digital Economy Act 2017

Monday, May 15, 2017 - 17:09

The Digital Economy Act 2017 contains sections relating to content filtering by "Internet Service Providers" (ISPs) and "Internet Access Providers" (IAPs). However both terms are derived from (and subsets of) the European definition of Public Electronic Communications Services, so will not apply to Janet or customer networks that are not available to members of the public. This means we can continue to choose filtering policies and technologies that are appropriate to the needs of research and education organisations, rather than having imposed solutions designed for domestic connections.

For any readers who do offer public connectivity, or are otherwise interested, the parts to look at are as follows:

  • Part 3 (Sections 14 to 30) of the Act allow the Age Verification Regulator (expected to be the British Board for Film Classification) to maintain a list of material that any ISP served with a notice is required to block (s.23); the Regulator may further prescribe how such blocking is implemented.
  • Section 104 ensures that content filtering and site blocking, for these or other reasons, is lawful so long as it complies with the terms and conditions for access to the network. This clarifies that provisions for IAPs in the European Network Neutrality Regulation do not make voluntary blocking unlawful.