Father of London teen who took her own life calls for Ofcom to "boldly" enforce new online safety laws
Molly Russell's Dad is urging the regulator to act fast once it becomes law
The father of a teenager from London who took her own life after struggling with the effects of negative online content is calling for Ofcom to be "bold and act fast" once the new Online Safety Bill becomes law.
Last year a coroner ruled 14 year-old Molly Russell, who was from Harrow, died from "an act of self-harm while suffering from depression and the negative effects of online content" in November 2017.
Ian Russell says he believes the Bill, which has been years in the drafting and imposes new legal duties on big tech companies and service providers, would āmake the online world saferā.
He said the regulator would need to take action immediately to ensure the Bill, which is expected to be made law soon by Parliament, was enforced.
Speaking on BBCās Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg, he said: āItās not perfect but itās an important step, and itās a step that has been needed for years to to counter this new technology, to counter these changes that are happening so fast that society doesnāt quite know what to do with.ā
"If the Bill fails to stop online harms that all our children saw, then it will have failed"
Calling on Ofcom to take immediate action once the Bill is passed, Mr Russell said: āThere are many other families, too many tragic stories to tell, some like Mollyās and some quite different, but if the Bill fails to stop online harms that all our children saw, then it will have failed.
āOnce this becomes law, weāre in a new phase where Ofcom as the regulator appointed by the Government to police the internet, to regulate the tech industry, has to get out of the blocks really fast.
āIt canāt waste time, it has to move fast and be bold and enact the clauses set out in the Bill in order to make the online world safer for children.ā
Mr Russell said he was āconfidentā the Bill would be effective as it was designed to be āfuture-proofā by not being ātechnology specificā.
He said: āOfcom have got a really tough job. Theyāre going up against some of the biggest, most well-funded corporations on the planet.
āBut they have already been staffing up, theyāve got hundreds of people working on online safety already, Iām sure they will be recruiting more people.ā
Mr Russell said he believed possible sanctions including jail terms for those in charge of technology firms would be an important part of the new law.
He said: āJail terms for tech bosses are important, not because I think tech bosses will ever end up going to jail, but I think it focuses their minds.
āWhat is really needed is a change of corporate culture at these big institutions. In two decades of social media, nothingās really changed.ā
"I hope Molly would be proud"
Describing his personal motivation for campaigning on the issue, he said: āI hope Molly would be proud and we hope that this step, the new Online Safety Bill, will mean there are fewer of those families with stories like Mollyās in the future.ā
An Ofcom spokesman said: āWeāre ready to start and very soon after the Bill receives royal assent weāll set out the first set of standards that weāll expect tech firms to meet in tackling illegal online harms.ā