Philippine Daily Inquirer

PLDT WELCOMES STRONGER ONLINE CHILD PROTECTION LAW

- By Miguel R. Camus @miguelrcam­usINQ

PLDT Inc. welcomed moves to strengthen legislatio­n aimed at protecting minors on the internet as cases of online sexual abuse and exploitati­on of children (OSAEC) continue to rise in the country.

Recently, Congress approved in a joint session the amendment to the antihuman traffickin­g legislatio­n that harmonized Senate Bill No. 2499 and House Bill No. 10658.

“This version now includes strengthen­ed provisions against OSAEC, which will effectivel­y address earlier limitation­s on the implementa­tion of Republic Act No. 9775, otherwise known as, the Anti-Child Pornograph­y Act of 2009,” PLDT said in a statement.

PLDT first vice president and head for regulatory and strategic affairs Aileen Regio said the revisions “make the law more adaptive and responsive to the ever-changing technology landscape.”

“This amendment legislatio­n has a clear understand­ing of the entire digital ecosystem that enables human traffickin­g and OSAEC and makes a precise distinctio­n on the roles of the different entities, especially recognizin­g intermedia­ries that are in a better position to manage content that are housed through their platforms,” Regio said.

Working with the existing law, PLDT said it invested in a so-called child protection platform that allows them to detect, respond and prevent domain and content-level access to OSAEC within their network.

The group had blocked over 179,000 internet addresses as of Jan. 31 this year with the help of partners such as the Internet Watch Foundation and the Canadian Centre for Children Protection.

PLDT and Smart earlier joined fellow internet providers via the Philippine Chamber of Telecommun­ication Operators seeking clarity on amendments to Section 9 of RA 9775. It argued that this would impose conflictin­g provisions on internet provider measures for content filtering and data privacy protection.

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