New Pornography Taskforce will propose law aimed at banning a type of material produced by porn star Bony blueKnown as “barely legal”.
It comes after Channel 4 Disseminate a documentary about the porn star, called “1000 Main and Me: The Boney Blue Story”, which followed him for six months.
The show attracted significant criticism, with the Children’s Commissioner for England, Dame Rachel de Suzza, with “Glamorizing and Normaling” Excode Pornography show.
The documentary features Tia Billinger – which uses the stage name Boney Blue – prepare to film a scene with a group of models designed in school uniform, which admits that they have been chosen for the scene because they look young.
“This material is emphasizing boundaries. We will try to address the ‘barely legal’ aspect”, Berona Burtin told Mentor,
She said that she is planning to amend the crime and policing bill, once Parliament returns from its summer holiday to make this material illegal for online platforms that can encourage child sexual abuse. This will include the content filmed by adults prepared as children.
Boney Blue initially became famous after filming sexual content with young male students, which he described as “barely legal”. He later gained infamous after filming the stunt, including a single one, which had sex with more than 1,000 men over a 24 -hour period.
Under the rules that are implemented on July 25 as part of the Online Security Act, online platforms, including social media sites and search engines, should take steps to prevent children from reaching harmful materials such as pornography or material that encourage suicides.
The Act also informed whether the sites are protecting the audience from extreme materials such as rape, bestness and depiction of necrofilia to protect the audience from illegal materials.
But currently, adults are not prohibited online by playing a role as children in pornography.
Channel 4 documentary, in which Boney Blue’s pixeld clip was shown having sex with more than 1,000 men, faced condemnation to challenge her, advertisers pulled support for the program.
Card payment business visa, juice maker Cowston Press and Vodka brand Smirnoff had all advertisements that appeared online during the show, but later told Channel 4 that they no longer wanted to promote their products during the program as it was not aligning with their advertising guidelines or values.
Dame Rachel said: “For years we have been freely present to our children on our social media feed, who have been fighting to protect their children from such derogatory, violent sex. This documentary risk is taking us a step back by glamorizing, even by normalizing us, young people tell me that they are horrific, confused and harmful.”
Baronic Burtin said: “Channel 4 showed a surprising lack of decision in showing such clear sex scenes. Glamorization and generalization of material creators like Boney Blue is more widely an impact. In my opinion, in my opinion, it is a direction of journey which is not particularly helpful for society nor is it prudent to call it.”
The spokesperson of a channel 4 said: “The film sees how Boney Blue has attracted attention around the world and has earned millions of pounds in the previous year, discovering the changing outlook for sex, success, pornographic and feminism in an online world.
“Director Victoria Silver faced many challenges to Bonnie, which he is considered during the documentary and how he is considered, and the film clearly uses bare strategies and strategies, which is left to make his opinion with the audience to make his opinion.”