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Contact your local MP and spread this far and wide:

Subject: Urgent Action Required – Online Safety Act Harms

Dear [MP’s Name],

I am writing to you as a concerned constituent to demand urgent review and amendment of the Online Safety Act (OSA). While its stated aim is to protect users, it has already created serious harm to privacy, freedom of expression, and access to public knowledge.

The Government’s response to the Change.org petition failed to meaningfully address any of these widely raised concerns, offering vague assurances instead of evidence or concrete changes. This is unacceptable in a democracy.

Key problems now being reported: • Excessive censorship – Vague definitions of “harm” are silencing lawful speech, political debate, and online communities. • Privacy risks from mandatory age verification – Requires intrusive ID checks (including facial recognition), creating huge data breach risks. • Threat to public-interest platforms – Wikipedia and similar sites could face UK restrictions if forced to verify all contributors. • Erosion of encryption – Weakening secure communication systems in a way experts call “authoritarian” and “technically incoherent.” • Ineffectiveness – VPN use has surged by over 500%, making the law easy to bypass while still harming UK-based platforms. • Harm to vulnerable communities – Risks “outing” LGBTQ+ individuals and deterring use of safe online support spaces.

Recent events highlight the urgency: • High Court ruling (Aug 2025) dismissed Wikimedia’s challenge, but confirmed Ofcom must act proportionately. • Major online communities and platforms have blocked UK users or imposed invasive checks. • Civil rights groups and tech experts continue to warn the OSA is fundamentally flawed.

I am asking you to: 1. Support a full Parliamentary review of the OSA’s harms and unintended consequences. 2. Press for immediate amendments to protect privacy, encryption, and public-interest platforms. 3. Suspend or repeal the most damaging provisions until they can be replaced with proportionate, evidence-based measures.

This is not a partisan matter — it is about protecting fundamental rights, digital freedoms, and public trust. I request a written reply outlining your position and the actions you will take.

Yours sincerely, [Your Name] [Your Address]

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[-] mysticmartz@lemmy.world 16 points 2 days ago

I then suggest we build a public list of MP’s that agree with us and those that don’t .

We don’t have to just contact our local MP’s we could contact other political parties and their leaders with a little rewording of the above.

[-] privacydingus@lemmy.ml 10 points 2 days ago

The best work on this is being done by ORG IMO: https://action.openrightsgroup.org/tell-your-mp-online-safety-act-isn%E2%80%99t-working

Kick them some change if you can afford it too.

[-] shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 days ago

As far as Wikipedia specifically goes, I made this comment on a different post that seemed to get some pretty nice engagement. I based this comment off of the SOPA and PIPA stuff from the US when i was in highschool.

https://lemmy.zip/comment/20740370

this post was submitted on 12 Aug 2025
102 points (100.0% liked)

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