Sky Broadband to bring in 'default on' setting over adult content

Updated

Sky Broadband will automatically block porn and other "adult content" by default for new customers from early next year, the company has confirmed.

The firm's Broadband Shield filtering system for adult as well as malicious content is currently optional for customers.

However, from 2016 it will come as standard for new subscribers, and is programmed automatically to not show content unsuitable for those under 18 until 9pm, though users can personalise this setting to suit them.

The broadcast giant said it will now email all existing customers, asking them if they would like the filter to be switched on.

If the email is ignored, Sky's policy is to turn on the filter automatically, as it did following a similar email sent in January, when all customers who joined prior to November 2013 were contacted.

It's part of a system to create an "unavoidable decision", where those who do not want a filter must actively choose to say so, something suggested by Prime Minister David Cameron in 2013.

Lyssa McGowan, Sky's brand director for communications products, said: "We believe that this 'default on' approach will mean much greater use of home filters and ensure a safer internet experience for millions of homes.

"It came about as we looked for the best way to meet the Prime Minister's objective of providing more protection for children when they use the internet."

Baroness Shields, the minister for internet safety and security, confirmed the Government's support for Sky's plans.

"Family filters have proven to be an extremely helpful tool for parents to safeguard children from age-inappropriate content," she said.

"Sky's 'default on' approach is a great example of how industry is exploring different technologies to help keep children safe online."

According to figures from Ofcom, by June this year Sky customers were the most active when it came to using content filters, with more than 30% leaving content filters switched on, while none of its rivals - BT, Virgin Media and TalkTalk - had reached 15%.

Sky added that 62% of the customers it had sent the "unavoidable decision" email had kept some form of parental control turned on.

The move has been criticised in some quarters however, with the Open Rights Group, which campaigns for freedom online, suggesting that Sky was not "giving customers an informed choice about filters" by enabling them by default.

The group added that parents should not be lulled into a "false sense of security" by filters, and should talk to their children about how to safely use the internet.

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