UK Parliament Advances 'Step' Porn Ban, Consent Withdrawal Law

UK Parliament Advances 'Step' Porn Ban, Consent Withdrawal Law

LONDON — The House of Lords, the U.K.’s upper house of Parliament, on Monday approved amendments to the pending Crime and Policing Bill that would invalidate talent contracts, and outlaw "step" porn and content in which adult performers appear to portray minors.

‘Step’ Content Ban

The House of Lords approved an amendment making possession or publication of pornographic images purporting to depict sex between relatives a priority offense under the Online Safety Act — a label that currently applies to material such as CSAM and terrorism content.

In December, the government rejected proposed amendments that would have criminalized content depicting sex between stepparents and stepsiblings. However, Baroness Gabrielle Bertin, a Conservative member of the House of Lords who served as independent lead reviewer on the influential U.K. pornography review, reintroduced language extending the prohibition on depictions of incest to include “step” content, a change that the House of Lords has now approved.

Bertin told the House of Lords that banning depictions of incest would prove to be merely a “token” measure unless the bill also bans depictions of step incest, which she called “just as damaging.”

If the Crime and Policing Bill becomes law with the amendment intact, possessing such material could be punished with up to two years imprisonment, a fine or both, while distributing such material could be punished with up to five years imprisonment, a fine or both.

Withdrawal of Consent

The House of Lords also approved an amendment to the Crime and Policing Bill that would entitle anyone appearing in adult content to withdraw their consent at any time.

The amendment would make it “irrelevant” whether an individual has previously given their consent to publication of the content in which they appear. If they subsequently withdraw their consent, platforms would have to remove the content within 24 hours.

Prior to the vote, Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State Baroness Alison Levitt told the assembled Lords that while the government accepted the intended aim of the amendment, it could not accept the proposed approach.

“The part of the amendment relating to the withdrawal of consent and its application to professional entertainment contracts has a number of practical implications,” Levitt cautioned. “Where content is produced legally, as with the wider film industry, the rules and regulations governing its use are usually a commercial matter to be agreed between the performer and the production company, taking into account the intellectual property framework.”

If the Crime and Policing Bill becomes law with the amendment intact, violations could result in imprisonment of up to two years, a fine or both. Platforms found to violate the law could be fined up to 18 million pounds or 10% percent of their worldwide revenue.

Adult Performers Portraying Minors

The House of Lords additionally approved an amendment that would outlaw content that “mimics” child sexual abuse by featuring an adult performer who “appears to be or is implied to be a child.”

Notably, this prohibition would interpret elements such as costume and setting as evidence of whether an adult performer is portraying a minor. No explicit mention of a character’s age would be required.

The government opposed this amendment, with Levitt warning legislators that it would create challenges for police and government authorities charged with enforcing prohibitions on actual CSAM.

“It is important to remember that the purpose of this suite of legislation is to criminalize indecent images of actual children and to help identify and swiftly safeguard children who are subject to sexual abuse,” Levitt said. “Expanding the scope of the Act to include adults who can and have consented to make pornography risks diverting resources for the police to try to distinguish children from adults who are pretending to be children. It risks delaying necessary safeguarding activity and leaving real children at continued risk of harm.”

If the Crime and Policing Bill becomes law with the amendment intact, content interpreted as featuring adult performers portraying minors would, like “step” content, become a priority offense under the Online Safety Act.

Pornography Review Head Denounces Industry

Measures intensifying regulation of adult content online gained momentum following the release, in February 2025, of the “pornography review” initiated under the conservative government of former U.K. Prime Minister Rishi Sunak.

The review’s recommendations included banning any adult content deemed “degrading, violent and misogynistic.” This led to the inclusion, in the Crime and Policing Bill, of content depicting nonfatal strangulation, or “choking.”

Bertin, who headed the review, repeatedly condemned the adult industry during Monday’s parliamentary debate

“It is a sector that has been driven to abusive extremes by powerful, profit-driven algorithms, too often monetizing sexual violence and degradation,” Bertin told the House of Lords. “Exploitation and trafficking are rife. Sexual abuse material remains far too easy to find on these sites, and many survivors tell us that what is filmed as content is in reality recorded abuse. This cannot continue.”

Bertin called for “a far more aggressive business disruption process across the porn ecosystem.”

“Porn is ultimately about the money,” she said. “We need far tighter regulation and law that ends the grey area and replaces the passive, light-touch self-regulation with far more proactive scrutiny.”

Once the Crime and Policing Bill passes out of the House of Lords, it will return to the House of Commons for consideration of the new amendments.

Copyright © 2026 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Pornhub Awards Fiesta: A Night of Music, Dancing and Camaraderie

The eighth annual Pornhub Awards transformed Los Candiles Night Club in Glassell Park into a celebration of glamour, glitter, fashion and fame Wednesday night, as performers, creators and industry insiders toasted the year’s winners and danced late into the night while Diplo and Midnight Mary kept the party pulsing from behind the decks.

Ukrainian Parliament Rejects Porn Decriminalization Bill

The Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s parliament, on Thursday voted against passage of a bill that would have decriminalized the creation and distribution of pornography in that country — an activity that currently carries a prison sentence of three to five years.

FSC Launches Pride Fundraising Drive

The Free Speech Coalition (FSC) has launched its Pride Fundraising Drive to support its efforts on behalf of the LGBTQ+ community.

Cultpix Debuts AI-Generated Vintage Adult Films at Cannes

At this year’s Cannes Film Festival, B-movie streaming service Cultpix debuted a collection of AI-generated short films drawn from erotic magazine photo spreads published 50 years ago.

Ofcom Fines Youngtek Solutions $800K for AV Noncompliance

U.K. media regulator Ofcom on Wednesday imposed fines totaling 600,000 pounds (more than $800,000) against adult site operator Youngtek Solutions for failing to implement age checks and respond to information requests as required for compliance with the Online Safety Act.

Pornhub Launches Lesbian Site 'Pornhub Sapphic'

Pornhub has launched Pornhub Sapphic, a site dedicated to female and non-binary content and creators.

Brazil Invites Public Input on AV Guidelines

Brazil’s National Data Protection Authority (ANPD) on Friday launched a public consultation on developing guidelines for age verification mechanisms under the country’s Digital Statute for Children and Adolescents (Digital ECA), which requires adult websites to age-verify users located in Brazil.

Paysite Confidential: Inside the Creator Economy's Shift Toward Ownership

For years, the adult industry’s creator economy has been defined by platforms — powerful engines of discovery, monetization and scale that reshaped how performers connect with their audiences.

Senator Urges DOJ to Crack Down on 'Obscenity,' Attacks OnlyFans

U.S. Senator Jim Banks of Indiana this week urged Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche to reestablish the Department of Justice’s defunct Obscenity Prosecution Task Force in a letter that targets OnlyFans while repeatedly conflating “obscenity” with legal adult content.

UN Experts Urge US, Canada to Prosecute Aylo, Others for 'Exploitation'

GENEVA – The United Nations Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) has issued a press release in which two U.N. special rapporteurs, cited as experts, accuse Aylo and other companies of complicity in sexual exploitation.

Show More