UK Crime and Policing Bill amendment targets tech exec liability
- A tabled amendment to the UK Crime and Policing Bill could make tech executives criminally liable if their companies fail to remove non-consensual intimate images.
- The proposal applies in the United Kingdom and focuses on company action over intimate image removal.
- The amendment adds potential personal liability for executives, not only corporate responsibility.
A tabled amendment to the UK Crime and Policing Bill could make technology company executives criminally liable if their companies do not remove non-consensual intimate images. The proposal was reported in the United Kingdom and would extend accountability from companies to individual executives.
The reported amendment concerns non-consensual intimate images and the failure by platforms or technology companies to remove that content. The source does not provide the amendment number, a timetable for passage, or specific penalties in the excerpt provided.
The proposal sits within a broader UK policy trend toward stronger platform accountability for harmful online content. For telecoms and digital platform companies operating in the United Kingdom, it signals that compliance obligations may increasingly include personal liability for senior executives as well as corporate enforcement.
Related Questions
- Could UK tech executives be criminally liable for not removing intimate images?
- Yes. A tabled amendment to the UK Crime and Policing Bill could make tech executives criminally liable if their companies fail to remove non-consensual intimate images.
- Is this proposal in the United Kingdom?
- Yes. The amendment was tabled in the United Kingdom as part of the Crime and Policing Bill.
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