Protecting people online from self-harm content and cyberflashing

24 Mar 2026 01:31 PM

People in the UK will be better protected online from illegal self-harm material and unsolicited nude images, under new proposals published today by Ofcom

The regulator is consulting on updates to its codes of practice and guidance to reflect the Government’s recent creation of new priority offences under the UK’s Online Safety Act. 

Duties on platforms

The Act lists over 130 priority offences. Under the Act, tech firms must assess the risk of these offences occurring on their sites and apps, put appropriate measures in place to mitigate the risk of them occurring, and take down priority illegal content quickly when they become aware of it. 

Ofcom’s codes of practice and guidance set out ways platforms can comply with these duties. 

New priority offences

In December 2025, the Government added cyberflashing and encouraging or assisting serious self-harm to the list of priority offences in the Act. To reflect this change in the law, we are consulting on updates to our Risk Assessment Guidance, Risk Profiles, Register of Risks, Illegal Content Judgements Guidance and Illegal Content Codes of Practice. 

This means that providers will have to assess the risk of unsolicited nude images and illegal self-harm content appearing on their services. They will also have to take appropriate safety measures to protect users from these harms. We are proposing that various existing measures in our codes should apply to these offences, including:

Next steps

We are inviting responses to our consultation by 5pm on Friday 24 April 2026. We will take all feedback into account before making our final decisions, which we expect to publish in summer 2026.