- VPN
- VPN Privacy & Security
Signal warns that the ultimatum undermines end-to-end encryption
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: StockPlanets/ Getty Images)
- Copy link
- X
- Threads
- UK government announces three-month ultimatum for big tech companies to improve child safety
- Privacy advocates warn the mandate could undermine privacy
- Signal is among those warning that the proposal will create more harm than good
The UK's plan to become "the first country" in the world where children are prevented from accessing explicit pictures on their devices is facing a growing backlash among privacy advocates and tech companies.
On Monday (June 8), British Prime Minister Keir Starmer took the stage at London Tech Week to give major tech firms, including Apple and Google, a three-month ultimatum "to prevent children from sending and receiving sexually explicit images."
End-to-end encrypted messaging app provider Signal was quick to publicly respond to Starmer's announcement, warning that the proposal won't safeguard children but will endanger all citizens instead.
In a post on X, VPN provider NymVPN argued that the mandate could usher in automated mass surveillance on consumer hardware. Meanwhile, UK-based digital rights group Big Brother Watch warned that these new obligations will lead to "the death of anonymity and internet privacy."
However, Starmer appears determined to implement these new safeguards. "I expect tech firms to make that happen. This is not an impossible challenge," Starmer said during the official announcement.
You may like-
UK government’s child safety plans could expose kids to 'greater harms,' warns VPN industry group
-
The UK warned 'not to undermine the open web' as Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill becomes law
-
I took the UK's online safety survey — here are the red flags every privacy advocate should know
Tech companies have until September to comply with the new rules. "But if they choose not to, then we will act and change the law," Starmer added.
The development comes as the government is expected to release the results of its consultation on children’s use of social media, which could introduce age restrictions on using VPN services.
The UK's child safety plans
The UK plan requires smartphone and tablet manufacturers like Apple and Google to activate built-in features or other technical solutions on smartphones and tablets "to detect and block nude images for children."
These changes are expected to apply to all UK devices, including both existing and newly sold smartphones and tablets, while new legislation could impact operating system providers and other companies involved in the devices' supply chain, such as retailers.
The government maintains that these features won't affect devices owned and used by adults who verify their age. However, this likely means everyone will be required to verify their identities to continue using their devices normally.
What to read next-
Google joins privacy backlash and warns Canada Bill C-22 could 'break end-to-end encryption' and create a 'surveillance infrastructure'
-
Age-restricting VPN users will create massive cybersecurity risks, warns Firefox creator
-
VPNs are not a 'threat' — industry hopes for an evidence-based outcome to UK online safety consultation
These requirements follow Apple's recent decision to introduce broader child safety features and age checks for UK iPhone users — but the government's new ultimatum goes a step further.
As the government notes, nudity detection tools do not currently impact children's use of the camera, third-party messaging services, or search functions. Consequently, children may still be exposed to inappropriate material.
"The government therefore wants Apple and Google to block nudity across the whole device by default, so they can only be deactivated via age assurance," the announcement reads.
Why are privacy advocates concerned?
In an open letter, Signal criticized the requirements as "dystopian," arguing that "surveillance is not safety."
According to the secure messaging service, forcing all UK residents to prove their age or have all their content scanned creates a dangerous precedent.
"We know that mass surveillance and censorship capabilities, however sincere-sounding the promises of those who initiate them are, never remain narrowly scoped," the letter reads.
Signal also argued that these requirements will not keep children safe, stating that children "deserve their human right to privacy."
Our statement on the UK government’s demand that all content on all devices sold or used in the country be scanned, on the presumption of nudity, using a dystopian combination of age verification and content scanning. This proposal will not safeguard children. It endangers us…June 8, 2026
Echoing Signal's concerns, Silkie Carlo, director of Big Brother Watch, also argued that the plan will fail to address the underlying causes of online harm.
"This will only result in population-wide ID checks for all of us to use our phones, tablets, and laptops," she said.
Beyond these "intrusive identity checks," Carlo warned of the unintended consequences of enforcing device-level restrictions on messaging, streaming, and browsing.
She stated that these mechanisms could "raise the potential of spyware in our pockets that will be exploited for other purposes before long."
Digital rights advocates have long warned about the privacy implications of mandatory age verification and scanning obligations. Recently, a coalition of over 400 scientists called for a halt on age checks until a "scientific consensus" is reached on the balance of benefits versus harm to the wider population.
Today's best VPN dealsFollow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds. Make sure to click the Follow button!
Chiara CastroSocial Links NavigationNews Editor (Tech Software)Chiara is a multimedia journalist committed to covering stories to help promote the rights and denounce the abuses of the digital side of life – wherever cybersecurity, markets, and politics tangle up. She believes an open, uncensored, and private internet is a basic human need and wants to use her knowledge of VPNs to help readers take back control. She writes news, interviews, and analysis on data privacy, online censorship, digital rights, tech policies, and security software, with a special focus on VPNs, for TechRadar and TechRadar Pro. Got a story, tip-off, or something tech-interesting to say? Reach out to [email protected]
View MoreYou must confirm your public display name before commenting
Please logout and then login again, you will then be prompted to enter your display name.
Logout Read more
VPN Privacy & Security
UK government’s child safety plans could expose kids to 'greater harms,' warns VPN industry group
VPN Privacy & Security
The UK warned 'not to undermine the open web' as Children's Wellbeing and Schools Bill becomes law
VPN Privacy & Security
I took the UK's online safety survey — here are the red flags every privacy advocate should know
VPN Privacy & Security
Google joins privacy backlash and warns Canada Bill C-22 could 'break end-to-end encryption' and create a 'surveillance infrastructure'
VPN Privacy & Security
Age-restricting VPN users will create massive cybersecurity risks, warns Firefox creator
VPN Privacy & Security
VPNs are not a 'threat' — industry hopes for an evidence-based outcome to UK online safety consultation
VPN Privacy & Security
Canada’s Bill C-22: Why Signal, Apple, and top VPNs are fighting the 'surveillance' law
VPN Privacy & Security
EU Parliament said no mass surveillance of your chats — but the Chat Control saga isn't done
VPN Privacy & Security
Proton CEO warns global age verification push will mean "the death of anonymity online"
VPN Privacy & Security
From essential security tools to restricted circumvention software: The EU signals that VPNs are the next target following the release of its age verification app
Tech
The UK Government's new social media rules for under-16s are coming soon
VPN Privacy & Security
Proton joins the backlash against Canada's surveillance bill
Latest in VPN Privacy & Security
VPN Privacy & Security
Windscribe now accepts cash for VPN subscriptions — but admits the process is 'the slowest, riskiest way to pay'
VPN Privacy & Security
Apple’s WWDC upgrades might protect your phone — this VPN deal will secure your connection
VPN Privacy & Security
Apple pulls Russia's state-backed MAX app from App Store over sanctions compliance
VPN Privacy & Security
Russian Roskomnadzor accused of launching active DDoS attacks on VPN services — here's what we know so far
VPN Privacy & Security
‘It’s becoming more difficult finding stable VPNs’ – China increases crackdown on VPN usage
VPN Privacy & Security
Japan is considering stronger age restrictions for social media use — but public response to the move hasn't been as positive as hoped
VPN Privacy & Security
FBI confirms 25 ransomware groups using First VPN’s now seized services
VPN Privacy & Security
Proton joins the backlash against Canada's surveillance bill
VPN Privacy & Security
Canada’s Bill C-22: Why Signal, Apple, and top VPNs are fighting the 'surveillance' law
VPN Privacy & Security
Polymarket blocks VPNs and tightens identity verification as over 30 countries ban the betting platform
VPN Privacy & Security
Canada vows to amend Bill C-22's encryption and metadata rules amid massive tech backlash
VPN Privacy & Security
Cybercriminals are using GTA 6 hype to spread malware ahead of launch, NordVPN warns
Latest in News
Hulu
The Bear season 5 finally has a trailer — and it looks like the most stressful chapter yet
VPN Privacy & Security
Windscribe now accepts cash for VPN subscriptions — but admits the process is 'the slowest, riskiest way to pay'
Fitness Trackers
Garmin Cirqa certification suggests it lacks built-in GPS
VPN Services
NordVPN lands on Meta Horizon — and VR privacy just got a whole lot easier
Computing
Researchers show how Russian satellites can jam GPS across Europe
ChatGPT
I sent an email without opening Gmail thanks to ChatGPT — then I found the catch
Apple Music
Apple Music's minor iOS 27 upgrades don't include continuity or social features
Gaming
Crazy Taxi: World Tour officially arrives in 2027 with all-new multiplayer modes, which series creator Kenji Kanno says were highly requested in 1999 — 'Back then we were limited by the technology'
Pro
Republicans call on FBI to investigate anti-data center sentiment as a Chinese psyop – despite 55% of data center opposition headed by Republicans
Security
Check Point says VPN attacks caused by Qilin ransomware group
Audio
PSA: despite iOS 27's new CarPlay feature, please don't watch YouTube in your car
iPhone
iOS 27 beta code points to a foldable iPhone Ultra
LATEST ARTICLES- 1Meta wants to train Americans to build its data centers — and is offering a free 5-week program to teach you everything
- 2The Bear season 5 finally has a trailer — and it could be the Hulu show's most stressful chapter yet
- 3Microsoft disables over 70 GitHub repos after hackers compromised them with dangerous malware
- 4Uplift Clarksville review: A simple, subtle office chair built for the workplace
- 5Nest Mini and Nest Audio speakers are mysteriously vanishing from the shelves, and I'm convinced the new Google Home Speaker is arriving soon