A man speaks into a microphone. Justice Minister and Attorney General of Canada Arif Virani tabled a bill on Monday meant to help protect young people from online abuse and exploitation. Photo: La Presse canadienne / Sean Kilpatrick CANADACANADA eng Long-awaited online harms bill proposes new regulatory bodies, Criminal Code changes by admin 27 فبراير، 2024 written by admin 27 فبراير، 2024 397 RCI Legislation would establish a five-member digital safety commission to enforce new rules The Liberal government is proposing new regulatory bodies and changes to a number of laws in new legislation to tackle online abuse. The Online Harms Act, tabled Monday, proposes to police seven categories of harmful content online. Those categories include content used to bully a child and content that encourages a child to harm themselves. They also include hate speech, content that incites violence or terrorism, content that sexualizes children or victims of sexual violence, and sexual content that is posted without consent. The Liberals are set to unveil an online harms bill today. Here’s what you need to know (new window) Liberals don’t want to regulate speech with online harms bill, justice minister says (new window) The legislation would see the government establish a five-member digital safety commission to enforce the new rules. The commission would be empowered to order the removal of online content that sexualizes children or victims of sexual violence, and sexual content that is posted without consent. The government also is proposing to establish a digital safety ombudsperson who would offer support to victims and guidance to social media companies. The act also would amend the Criminal Code to increase sentences for spreading hate online. The Canadian Human Rights Act would be amended to allow complaints about online hate speech to be filed with the Canadian Human Rights Commission. The legislation would impose new responsibilities on online platforms. Companies would be expected to assess, minimize and report risks to users, and provide tools to allow users to flag harmful content. Platforms would be expected to remove certain content — content that sexualizes children or victims of sexual violence, and sexual content that is posted without consent — within 24 hours of a complaint being filed. Online platforms covered by the bill include social media sites, live-streaming platforms and user-uploaded adult content, says the bill. Darren Major (new window) · CBC News · 0 comment 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestEmail admin previous post Province needs more control of immigration following federal cap, MLA says next post Cri du cœur d’ambassadeurs quant à la couverture médicale du personnel à l’étranger You may also like كارني ناقش مع شينباوم مجالات التعاون بين بلديهما 27 أبريل، 2026 بريتيش كولومبيا: الخمور الأميركية ستبقى محظورة لأنّ الناس... 27 أبريل، 2026 تحقيق في مزاعم إغراق السوق برفوف فولاذية قادمة... 27 أبريل، 2026 سفير كندا لدى واشنطن يعتذر لتوجيهه دعوةً بالإنكليزية... 27 أبريل، 2026 Liberals must show results in spring economic update:... 27 أبريل، 2026 Bayers Road blood collection clinic to reopen Tuesday 17 مارس، 2026 Thousands of power outages as rain and wind... 17 مارس، 2026 ’’يجب تجنّب‘‘ أيّة عملية إسرائيلية واسعة في لبنان... 17 مارس، 2026 تونس وسلطنة عُمان ضيفتا شرف معرض الكتاب العربي... 17 مارس، 2026 لبنان: حربٌ ومستشفىً وثلاثة بورتريهات 17 مارس، 2026